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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:21:56 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #14 "The Blitzkrieg Squad of Baron Strucker!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Geo Bell letters: Artie Simek grade: C This issue hurts my brain for several reasons. The first is that this issue is supposed to mark the big debut of Strucker's Blitzkrieg Squad. The cover clearly promises this, showing an exciting confrontation between them and the Howlers, and we spend five pages watching Strucker amass and train a crew with skills and abilities exactly equal to those of the individual Howlers, yet there is no confrontation! Apart from Gabe's counterpart playing a flute, the rest just pull levers and throw nets and steel crates to trap the Howlers. We never actually see this "Blitzkrieg Squad" in action, never see them match their abilities against those of the Howlers, etc. By the end of this issue, you'd expect to see the big confrontation, watch the Howlers prevail, and learn that it isn't the individual skills and abilities that matter, but rather the resolve that comes from American rugged individualism, but this story never gets there. We never even learn any of the Squad members' names, never see them in action, and pretty much forget about them so much that, in the last panel, when Dick shows us their faces and Stan promises that they will return, my initial response was, "Who? ...Oh. Uh, why?" Another thing I didn't get about this issue was the return of Captain Savage. Stan and Dick draw a lot of attention to his return, yet his name is never given, and he doesn't really add anything to this story or even further the plot in a way that some other submarine captain couldn't. Was Stan testing the waters to see if fans would demand to see more from this character? Between this and Happy Sam's taking time off to train some other team a few issues back, it seems like Stan might have been thinking about launching Captain Savage and his Leatherneck Raiders this early on, but (as Cei-U! has aptly pointed out), that title is still three years away. Then there's the whole continuity problem. The first issue clearly indicates that D-Day was already being planned, leaving me to wonder if continuity was going to make any sense in a series that was clearly intended to be ongoing. But then Stan has this issue begin with the Howlers training for D-Day. It had me begin to think that Stan WAS watching continuity and intentionally setting this title in the final months of the European Theater. But then, in this VERY SAME ISSUE, he responds to a fan's letter by saying: "Anyhow, you should know by now that our yarns don't necessarily follow any definite chronological order...We just write 'em as we dream 'em up! Okay?" Here's a hint, then. Don't mention D-Day in your stories! If you don't want us to look for chronology, then avoid the battle that EVERYONE knows definitively ended the conflict in Europe! Granted, the attack on Okinawa was a giveaway to some as well, but how much more stupidly obvious can you be than by repeatedly invoking D-Day? Save it for one of those annuals that take place in the future! And finally, Ayers' art is really starting to lose its charm. Whereas I originally praised him for his attention to facial detail, his characters' faces are suddenly becoming as wildly inconsistent as Kirby's. Check out Fury in the last panel of page 8, Captain Savage on page 10, Reb on page 12, Hitler on page 19, and even the German flautist across panels on page 5. Inexcusable, considering how consistently we've seen him draw faces before. The minor details: - Strucker got his spectacle back. He didn't have one in his last appearance. - Hitler spends all that time threatening to kill Strucker if he fails in this mission, and yet nothing appears to happen when he does fail. What gives? - Strucker has now become the Howler's main antagonist by default. Hitler essentially decides to use Strucker to stop the Howlers because he's failed the least miserably in attempting to stop them in the past, so we can be pretty sure Hitler will employ the same logic again. Not sure I like the idea of The Howlers getting a supervillain team akin to The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, though. Isn't this supposed to be a war comic? The plot synopsis in one sentence: Hitler orders Strucker to capture The Howlers, Strucker assembles his own team of commandos with skills equal to those of the individual Howlers, he sets a trap for them with fake missiles, they fall into the trap, they get out of the trap, and Strucker looks stupid. Pretty much an "eh" issue that felt a little too much like a generic superhero team story, not giving enough attention to the charm that makes this title special. I wonder if Strucker's "Blitzkrieg Squad" truly will return.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:26:05 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #15 "Too Small to Fight, Too Young to Die!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Steve Ditko letters: S. Rosen grade: C I'm not sure this issue had any idea what it wanted to be. The cover and title seemed to suggest this would be a story about the Howlers having to protect an orphaned child on the field of battle, but that's far from what was delivered. The boy was far from helpless and was devoid of a personality to boot. The central conflict of the story wasn't a need to protect him. Instead, the story took an abrupt turn into the question of who Agent X was, with some far too obvious clues left that it was the Hans' father (of whom he is ashamed, believing him to be a Nazi sympathizer). I called this twist early on in the story, for what it's worth, but I was disappointed to see it take center stage by the end. For at least the third time now, this title is feeling too much like a superhero mag, with issues of mysterious heroes and secret identities at the center. These kinds of issues are not what has made this a strong title in the past. I still want to see that story of the Howlers getting an innocent child to safety. So is Hans going to be sticking around in this title? Minor details: - Ditko takes over the inks for this issue. Can't say I noticed. I would have loved to have seen Ditko pencil this thing, though. Ayers' work is so basic in contrast. Ditko probably inked this in his sleep. - Still don't understand the rationale behind the mission. All the Nazis have to do is amass their troops in a scattered fashion, and suddenly bombers, battleships, and invading infantries won't work against them anymore? It HAS to become a commando espionage mission?? And really, if they're so spread apart, how will blowing the dam in one spot drown all the Nazi forces? - Reb's inability to be beaten in poker has become a running gag by this point. - On page 14, Percy complains about Gabe's horn and is told by Dum Dum that he'll "get used to it." Apparently, very little time has progressed between these stories if Percy is still adjusting to the squad. The plot synopsis in one ridiculously long sentence: The Howlers have to covertly blow up a part of a dam in Holland in order to drown the Nazi forces amassing there without drowning any native homes, they are told to rendezvous with an "Agent X" who does not show at first, they meet 14 year old Hans who has run away from his father, the town's mayor and a Nazi sympathizer, Agent X shows up and is strongly implied to be Hans' father, he asks the Howlers to take Hans to England and away from the fighting, and they do so. Not a great issue. I feel like Stan is getting lost in the rising Marvel Superhero Universe and losing sight of what makes this title special.
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:28:05 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #16 "A Fortress in the Desert Stands!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Frank Ray letters: Artie Simek grade: C- I'm getting very bored with these. Whereas this title once had charm, pushed boundaries, and stood for certain ideals, now it's just a matter of putting the group on an impossible mission and watching the inevitable happen. I think the only interesting aspect of this entire issue was watching the team care for a seriously wounded Reb. Of course he's magically all better by the end of the issue. Minor details: - Hans Rooter is still sticking around and still displaying absolutely no personality as a base-grounded kid sidekick. - Far too many lucky moments for the Howlers this issue, especially as the German commander fires a semi-automatic at Fury while only about 15 feet from him and somehow completely misses. Dum Dum and Reb had considerable luck earlier in the issue as well, with Reb's being wounded actually seeming like the result of highly unlikely good fortune. - Why did Fury have to wait until the moment the commander ordered the firing squad to fire to lead his attack? Isn't that cutting it just a bit too close for the sake of unnecessary drama? - This is the second time the Howlers have run into Arabic Muslim tribes in this title. The first time, the tribe they ran across was far too happy to help Americans. This group is a bit more real, mistrustful of Americans and their Western culture, though they are still won over to the Allied cause entirely too easy after some minor persuasion. - Reb seems to have grown attached to the Muslim girl who nursed him back to health. I wonder if that's going anywhere in later issues. The plot synopsis in one long sentence: The Howlers attempt to raid a Nazi fortress in the North African desert, they faiil, Dum Dum is captured and Reb is seriously wounded, they stumble upon a (Persian?) tribe that mistrusts them but ultimately agrees to help them, they attack and rescue Dum Dum, and Reb has recovered.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:28:18 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #17 "While the Jungle Sleeps!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Vince Colletta letters: Artie Simek grade: C+ As surprisingly progressive as this comic is for the time period, sometimes its willingness to tackle issues no one else was tacking back in the day comes off...weird. Case in point: This issue tries to put Gabriel, the African American member of the gang, in the lead role for much of the issue, but the means of doing this is having him strip down and pretend to be a witch doctor to a tribe of restless natives in an African jungle. Ummm... Technically, nothing at all about this was racially insensitive beyond the tribe being depicted in a very stereotypical fashion and in their complete willingness to accept a new witch doctor who appeared out of nowhere. Still, it was...weird. Whereas I once found this title fresh and original in portraying WWII in a less than idyllic light, it's now starting to feel very conventional. EVERY Nazi is a mindless drone touting Nazi propaganda and ultimately turning out to be a coward; there isn't a single member of the Nazi army who is brave, and there isn't a single member of the army who is just there because he has to be. They're all Hitler zombies, which feels more like propaganda than reality. And, in contrast, all G.I.s come off as perfect heroes (well, aside from Bull McGivers). Check out the soldiers Nick rescues from the native prison camp. They're all in rag tag clothes and have scruffy faces, but their hair is perfect, and so is their morale. A part of this fantasy is nice -- especially Lee's continued celebration of an American ideal in which everyone is an individual, but everyone pitches in for the sake of the greater whole. Still, the all Germans = zombies, and all Americans = heroes bit is beginning to feel very cheesy. Maybe I'm expecting too much from an early Marvel comic tackling a war that still felt close to home. Really, the only other bits worth mentioning in this issue are that there's a nice bit of continuity in this issue, having its events pick-up directly after the end of the previous issue, and the reintroduction of Pamela Hawley, who hasn't been seen in quite a few issues and is undoubtedly tacked on at the end just so that we'll remember and care about her in time for the next issue. Minor details: - Ayers has a lot of fun with Nick in this issue, having him smile and look happy several times. Get it out of your system now, Dick. He won't be smiling for at least the next few issues. - In general, I think I enjoyed Nick's characterization most in this issue, both watching him look happy and having him watch over the sleeping Howlers while he, himself, was exhausted. There's a kindness and good nature coming through his rough exterior. Maybe this comes out the longer that they're deployed (they've been in the field for well over a week now), or maybe it was just a random shift in this issue. - So the plan was to have Gabe infiltrate as a witch doctor and then stop watching him? He's captured, and the Howlers have plenty of opportunities to rescue him from a wooden cage, yet they don't show up until after the German commander fires his gun directly at him. - Speaking of which, why wasn't Gabe hurt? The commander clearly fired, and we heard a "click," but nothing more was mentioned of this. Was he out of ammo??? - Best moment in the issue -- Percy 'chuting in with his umbrella as a native warrior comments "What manner of warrior is THAT??!" - The letter column shows a lot of fan distaste for the Fury/Captain America team-up and a desire to keep the series grounded and away from super-heroics. These stories are never bad, but they're certainly becoming boring by this point. Obviously, next issue brings about a major change. Hopefully some momentum will be generated from that.
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Post by shaxper on Jan 4, 2015 21:28:34 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #18 "Killed in Action!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Chic Stone letters: Artie Simek grade: A- The second and certainly more memorable of the two major deaths that occur in this run. The cover outright promises this, the first pages lead you to believe it will be Pam, but a mission gone wrong with a distracted Nick Fury endangering his comrades offers some nice misdirection before the painful ending. It's a great issue throughout, leaving you afraid the entire time, first that Pam will die, second that a Howler will die and it will be Nick's fault, and finally knowing who has died but still dreading the painfully drawn out moment when Nick will learn this fact. In fact, the ending is kind of preposterous, with every single person in Nick's world in the know except for him and all making lame attempts to stop him, but it draws out the inevitable further, paints Nick's rose colored glasses a few shades rosier, and just makes the whole thing that much more unbearable. Add to this the fact that everyone seems to have stepped up their work for this issue. The banter amongst the Howlers is more entertaining than usual, the pressure to create a mission that's somehow larger and more impossible than anything that's come before is off in this issue since it's not the main focal point, freeing Stan up to just have fun with the mission, and the art absolutely came alive stronger than it ever has before. Part of it is Ayers, taking soem unconventional approaches to dramatic focal points in his frames (i.e. the terrified half face of the German officer in the foreground int he final panel of page 7, the focus on the ringing phone over the face of the sleeping German officer in the third panel of page 5, or even just the dark silhouettes of Fury and the German officer fighting in darkness on page 14, emphasizing the primal struggle over the details of either character. Meanwhile, Stone does an extraordinary job on inking (a favorite example of mine is the last panel on page 13, where the inks make that officer far more foreboding and seemingly real than he otherwise should be), and whoever is on colors makes some bold decisions, especially bathing that German officer's face in red terror on page 7, or Lord Hawley in an entirely different shade of red grief on page 20. And, of course, there's those final four panels in which Nick drops the ring. Exceptional work on the parts of all three artists. Still, my one complaint with this issue is that I find it frustrating that Pam Hawley had been out of the picture for so many issues and is now suddenly reintroduced at the end of the last issue and killed in this one. I think the impact would have been stronger had Nick planned to propose even an issue earlier, not forcing all of this into this one story. This was the first Sgt. Fury issue I ever read, and part of the reason I felt drawn to go back and read the series from the beginning was that I wanted to care about the loss of Pam Hawley more than I did, but going back and reading the earlier issues does nothing because she was a non-entity prior to this point - a cute accessory that put Fury in funny situations by attempting to reform him, but nothing more significant than that. Surely, her absence for the past however many issues didn't help either. Stan should have spent more time building her up before taking her away from us. Finally, I want to share Stan's own comments about this issue from the letters page. I think they're important ones: "We hope this month's issue will serve to point out a very meaningful fact to all who read it -- namely, war is hell! If you think there's glamour to it, forget it! People get hurt, people suffer, people die! And, as in the case of Nick Fury, people often lose loved ones! Once or twice in the past, readers have commented that we sometimes make war seem almost humorous because the Howlers kid around so much. However, any ex-serviceman knows that all fighting men clown around and swap wisecracks during moments of great stress -- not because there's anything to joke about, but merely to bolster their courage -- to take their minds off the threat of danger and sudden death which they lives with night and day! Sometimes a bantering remark can keep a combatman from cracking up under fire! So never be misled by any humor you may find in these yarns -- for, such is the nature of man that he will sometimes face death with a wisecrack, even while the icy fingers of fear are clutching at his heart!" Nicely said, Stan. Minor detail: Since when is Nick a master at firing anti-aircraft turrets? The plot synopsis in one long sentence: Nick and Pam are caught in an air-raid and have to split up, Nick calls to make sure Pam got back to her unit, she sounds more affectionate towards him than ever, he takes this as a sign to buy her an engagement ring and is deployed before he can propose, the Howlers are assigned to take down a German ship, things go wrong, Nick gets distracted when a German officer accidentally grabs Pam's ring, he nearly endangers the mission, the Howlers prevail, Captain Sawyers and the Howlers learn bad news ahead of Nick and try to tell him before he leaves to propose to Pam, but they fail, Nick gets to the door and is greeted by Pam's father only to learn that she has been killed in action, leaving Nick to drop the ring and wander, dazed, out into the distance.
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Post by shaxper on Jan 8, 2015 20:03:05 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #19 "An Eye for an Eye" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Frank Ray letters: S. Rosen grade: B+ If the end of the previous issue and the cover and solicitation for this one left you expecting a revenge-obsessed Nick Fury on the edge, you're bound to be a little disappointed. Instead of watching the impulsive act of a desperate man, we merely watch Fury pushing the men too hard through training once again (as he did when Junior died), disobey orders to go on a secret mission of vengeance, and then get a final one-on-one battle with the German officer responsible for the bombing raid that killed Pam with far less blood-thirst and vengeance than you might expect. Nick drops his gun to duke it out with the guy, allowing the officer to pull a gun and prove he has no scruples thus further justifying any noble action Nick takes against him, and even in spite of this, his final demise is caused by gravity and poor planning -- not Nick. So I'd hardly call this "the roaring revenge of Nick Fury". Maybe it was a fear for the comics code, but I feel Nick could have taken a bigger grief-induced dive over the deep end of vengeance in this one, finally pulling back and finding the strength to be a hero at the last moment. That said, I did like the level of concern and support the Howlers attempt to provide to Fury in this issue, as well as that final panel when Nick visits Pam's grave. While the vengeance and grief aspects of this issue didn't live up to their potential, I did enjoy watching Nick and the Howlers have to surreptitiously work within their own organization the way they normally infiltrate German ranks. Walking into that intelligence room and having Dino work information out of a young woman there felt far more exciting than Nick's absurd climactic battle aboard a WWI bi plane. Also worth mentioning (or is it?) That Stan arbitrarily inserts the return of Hans and his Nazi sympathizing father who is secretly Agent X in this story (from Sgt. Fury #15). It absolutely felt forced, and I never liked these characters to begin with. Art-wise, Ayers still feels like he's actually trying in this issue, providing some truly rich, dramatic shots in the issue, though Frank Ray's inks lack the flair and embellishment that Chic Stone's did last issue, and the anonymous colorist who made such ambitious decisions in drenching certain characters in hues of red last issue begins to do it far more indiscriminately this time around, arbitrarily drenching some characters in total red for no seeming reason. Apropo of this, the letters column appears to explain why the colorist goes uncredited in these issues, implying that he/she is outsourced and not part of the Marvel staff. Here's what was said: "Stevey, we only write and draw the stories! Then, the pages go to the engraver--then the printer! Somewhere along the way, some saboteur seems to get his hands on every ish and make a million bone-headed mistakes such as the ones you mentioned. We hate to pass the buck, but honestly, we get just as burned up about all the coloring errors as you do. But we have so many mags going thru the presses so quickly, that we're never able to fix them up in time!" I suppose this could be referencing the coloring process only and not the work of the colorist him/herself. Any insight on this, folks? Minor details: I believe this is the first time The Pig 'n Whistle is named. I'll have to double check. Plot synopsis in one long sentence: Nick is pushing his crew too hard after the death of Pam Hawley, Captain Sawyers gives them a furlough to recuperate (especially Nick), Nick decides to use the time to plan a secret mission to get revenge against the man who ordered the attack that killed Pam, the Howlers want in, and they do it. Pretty solid issue, but not as great as it should have been.
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Post by shaxper on Jan 8, 2015 20:04:54 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos #20 "The Blitz Squad STRIKES!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Frank Ray letters: Artie Simek Grade: B- Last time around (Sgt. Fury #14), Stan felt the Blitzkrieg Squad was an important enough nemesis to give it half a book to introduce, and yet, when the conflict finally got going, none of the team's members ended up doing anything significant. This time around, Stan bothers to bring them back out of some misguided notion that even a war comic requires a super villain team, and he manages to do pretty much the same thing with them again. Despite a cover warning that the squad is, "Back Again! More DEADLY Than ever!" apparently all "more DEADLY than ever!" means is that one of them actually manages to do something in the story. Sure enough, while they all receive names this time around, only Siegfried actually gets any real battle time, going head to head with Dum Dum and immediately showing cowardice. We don't even see the rest get defeated. Fury defeats Strucker and, the next thing we know, they're all being marched off in handcuffs. Worse yet, they don't even seem particularly matched with the Howlers, which had been the entire point the first time around. Siegfried and Dum Dum both wear ridiculous hats. That appears to be the full extent of their similarities. So what exactly is Stan expecting us to find appealing or worthwhile about these characters? At the same time, I wonder if the Blitzkrieg Squad is responsible for Strucker's enduring legacy in the Marvel Universe today. Truly, beyond the fact that he commands this team, there would have been no reason to have brought him back, issue after issue, at this point. He might have been as easily forgotten as some of the other Nazi antagonists the Howlers have faced off against had it not been for the Blitzkrieg Squad. Similarly, I wonder if the X-Men's Magneto ever would have amounted to anything had he not been the head of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, which feels like a direct parallel to the Blitzkrieg Squad. Then again, Magneto was in the first issue; Strucker was not. Also worth noting in this issue is Stan and Dick's unique pacing of the violence. In a comics code approved book, there's only so much violence a war comic can depict, and it feels paced carefully in this issue so as to remain intense even without bullet-riddled bodies and blatant depictions of death. In the first battle scene, there are absolutely no weapons fired. The Howlers leap on a band of Nazis before they can fire their guns and simply clown around with them as if this were all a game. A Nazi is even pushed out of a window while the dialogue reassures us that there is a moat below. Then, eventually, Fury lobs agrenade into a window that has a soldier's head peaking out, suggesting (though not overtly stating) death. Suddenly, in the next frame, we have lots of guns firing, lots of grenades being thrown on the page after, and finally guns being fired in tight places. It's also worth noting that a second Nazi gets thrown out the window around this point, and we are not similarly assured that a moat will be cushioning his fall. All together, it comes off like a carefully building symphony of violence, still ending in tame comic-code friendly violence, but feeling more intense because of the gradual build-up. Meanwhile, artwise, Dick Ayer is still bringing a little more to the game than he had been prior to #18. I particularly enjoyed his depiction of Reb lobbing a grenade on page 14. It's not Kirby-level, but it's good. Finally, it's worth mentioning that we see several indications that the title is faring extremely well in this issue. We see the first solicitations for a Nick Fury T-shirt, learn than an annual is being developed, and finally get our first glimpse of Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. which is seeing print this very month. Big news indeed! Minor Details: -Bull McGiveney is still being forced upon us as a pathetic rival to Nick Fury. He feels just as forcefully imposed upon us as this entirely unnecessary Blitzkrieg Squad does. - How do Dum Dum and Siegried fall head first down a flight of stone steps and not even show a bruise for it? Plot synopsis in one long sentence: The Blitzkrieg Squad sneaks into England and takes over a castle, holding the military operatives there as prisoners, Nick and Bull McGiveney fight over who will get to stop them, Captain Sawyer chooses The Howlers (no surprise), they invade the castle, Dum Dum and Siegfried face off for a while, Nick and Strucker face off, Nick wins, and the Blitzkrieg Squad is captured. Well paced, but otherwise an unimpressive issue. If these are supposed to be the arch rivals that we love to hate, then Stan needs to spend a little more time developing them. Then again, we don't read war comics to find arch rivals and super villains. Either way, reintroducing the Blitzkrieg Squad proved to be a poor choice here.
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Post by shaxper on Jan 12, 2015 20:22:51 GMT -5
Note: at this point in the reviews, the Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. feature begins running in Strange Tales. While I, myself, have argued that reading the second Dr. Strange feature along with it is integral to fully enjoying both features since they were written in parallel and, I would argue, to balance out each other's tones, I will only be reviewing the Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. feature because it is the only portion that is directly relevant to this reviews thread.Strange Tales #135 "The Man for the Job" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Jack Kirby inks: Dick Ayers letters: Artie Simek grade: A Two things are clear at this point in the history of The Howling Commandos: 1. Stan Lee was getting very excited about this universe of superheroes he was building and desperately wanted to incorporate the Howling Commandos into it. 2. Fans wanted the Howling Commandos to remain grounded in historic fiction and apart from the emerging Marvel Universe. And so we have our solution -- present day Nick Fury engaged in a new kind of war, facing the same kind of antagonist the Howlers did, but in a world open to sci fi imaginative fancy and free to comfortably cross over with superheroes without the connection seeming like a stretch (and, in fact, Tony Stark is featured prominently in this story, teasing us with the idea that we might eventually see Iron Man in these pages -- though we won't). After all, S.H.I.E.L.D.'s mission was far more dire and significant than anything most superheroes were engaged in at the time. It's a perfect marriage, really -- the low brow, grounded Nick Fury in a glamorous, high tech James Bond world. There's tons of comedy in the mismatch, though (fortunately) Stan and Jack keep it subtle and implied rather than outright stated. However, they're also careful to show that an experienced and hardened ex-non com soldier is far more ideal for such a desperate mission than a pretty boy like James Bond would be. They also play up the importance of his having to lead and depend upon others, just like a non com, rather than going it on one's own and expecting to be successful in that method. I find HYDRA to be a fascinating choice for a villain. Yes, it's a great concept for an evil organization, and yes it's a logical extension of Hitler and the Third Reich (those connections are shown more clearly as the series progresses), but it's also interesting to me that Stan and Jack would take a war hero from the 1940s, and place him in modern day to fight a fictitious evil empire rather than going with the obvious choice of the Soviet Union, the empire that Americans perceived as being an evil threat to our world at the time. Perhaps there's a subtle commentary in that decision. Clearly, Stan and Jack didn't perceive the Red Scare as being the same level of threat (or at least not the same clearly defined good vs. evil struggle) that Nazi Germany had been. So let's talk about this Supreme Headquarters International Espionage Law-Enforcement Division. Yeah, comics were full of those terrible Man From U.N.C.L.E. inspired acronyms at the time (remember T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents and U.N.D.E.R.S.E.A. Agent?), but what does "Supreme Headquarters International Espionage Law-Enforcement Division" really mean? I mean, if SHIELD is just a division of the Supreme Headquarters, than what IS the Supreme Headquarters? We never ever hear about it, and the agent initially helping Fury in this issue even says, "I serve the American division of a secret international organization whose code name is...SHIELD!" clearly indicating that SHIELD is its own organization with its own divisions. Essentially, wouldn't SHIELD be more accurately called IEL? There really isn't too much to discuss about this first story in its own right since it's really just an introduction to the entire premise. I will say, though, that while the Steranko era is better remembered because of its amazing art, this was always the very best SHIELD era in my opinion, both for the fantastic sweeping story arc and for Kirby's art which, while not on Steranko's level, is pretty sweet here, especially when we get our first look at the SHIELD Heli-Carrier. In the end, I suppose Stan Lee's intention of bringing the Howlers into the Marvel Universe didn't really work. It captures the basic idea of Nick Fury as leading commander against an evil organization bent on world conquest, but virtually everything else has changed -- and for the better. The comedy is more subtle, the imagination richer and more rewarding, the concept isn't restrained by factual history (which Lee largely ignored previously anyway), and I absolutely love the idea of a sweeping story arc with HYDRA as the villain rather than self-contained stories about individual battles. All that remains to be seen is whether Nick will gain a band of compatriots as fun as The Howlers could be, and if this series will make it its mission to break new ground and advocate controversial ideas about tolerance and brotherhood the way the Howling Commandos have. Minor details: - I'm assuming Tony Stark didn't have to submit to the "most thorough electro-chemical analyzer known to man when coming aboard the Heli-Carrier. Otherwise, they'd probably want to know what's up with the thing on his chest. - Wow. HYDRA can repeatedly compromise an organization as well put together as SHIELD, learning that Fury will be their new commander before even he knows and planting a bomb under his interview chair. I have to believe much of this was Jack's idea since Lee's best solo effort to create antagonists for Nick Fury to date has been the Blitzkrieg Squad of Baron Strucker. I'm incredibly excited to read these again. It had always been my assumption that the SHIELD stories came along later on since they're so much better than the Sgt. Fury stories (sorry if I offended anyone with that opinion), but I think it might just be the difference of having Kirby aboard as co-plotter. I hear the Sgt. Fury stories get better around issue #40, but it's going to be hard to return to them in the meanwhile while constantly comparing them to the SHIELD stories.
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Post by shaxper on Jan 12, 2015 20:24:35 GMT -5
Thought I'd explain this a little further and, at the same time, encourage anyone who wants to keep pace with these reviews to ABSOLUTELY read the Dr. Strange feature even while I'm not reviewing it. It's the best Dr. Strange stuff ever written, but even more than that, it enhances the SHIELD stories in contrast.
Allow me to quote myself from a long while back:
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Post by shaxper on Jan 12, 2015 20:24:55 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #21 "To Free a Hostage" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Carl Hubbell letters: Artie Simek grade: D+ Reading Agent of SHIELD again has really spoiled me. In contrast, this next installment in the Sgt Fury title feels disappointingly generic: a ludicrous mission, the same wisecracks each time (though Dum Dum neglected to mention his wife this time around), a moment where the astonished Nazis comment on how they outnumber the Howling Commandos and yet they are winning, etc. etc. etc. For a comic that, at various times, has taken an active interest in communicating bold messages about tolerance as well as depicting the true horrors of war, things are starting to feel awfully vanilla. I at least enjoyed beginning the story with Izzy's anguish and guilt as he believes for a moment that he's killed the Howlers (nice start to any issue of a comic), but this all gets lost after only a page, and the generic plot proceeds in its place. Really, where's the reward in reading this book, month after month? It seems like you should buy one really good issue and just keep reading it again. Of course, that's not fair. There were plenty of stronger issues in the beginning, but things are wearing thin. Maybe it's time for old Stan to step aside and let someone else take the helm? minor details: - The Howlers' ideal time off from duty involves getting into one bar fight, tiring of it, and then wanting to go back on a mission. Okay, that was cute. - Some of Stan's playful/sarcastic narration around this point in the story was amusing as well. - Bull McGiveny -- why? Stan has been forcing this would-be rival to Fury down our throats for months now, and it just isn't working. - More weird use of red saturation by the colorist in this issue, especially the random German officer on page 6 and the even more random leg in the foreground on page 14. - Let's be clear: The Howlers raided a prison camp to free ONE girl and left the rest to fend for themselves. They couldn't fit one more person in the car? How many prisoners ended up being killed for this escape attempt? Pretty damn short-sighted victory by my count. - I liked the fact that Fury bothered to acknowledge that he knew what it felt like to lose someone upon learning that the girl's mother has died (see, there's your extra car space). That was pretty much the only moment of the story that didn't feel canned/generic. - What a weirdly paced story. So much of the action is in trying to get the girl home, but Fury and the gang have been stranded behind enemy lines tons of times in the past. This is hardly suspenseful and merely feels like a desperate ploy to stretch out the story, even while the ending gets rushed as a result. The scientist learns his wife has died and gets over it all in the same panel on the final page. - The Nazis couldn't figure out by Fury's broadcast that they'd be looking for a pick-up along the English Channel? Plot summary in one sentence: The Howlers go on a mission to free a top Allied scientist's wife and daughter from a Nazi prison camp, they get the daughter (the mother had already died), but get stuck behind enemy lines when their methods of escape keep getting thwarted, so they struggle on and eventually get a radio message through to HQ, allowing them to be picked up by boat and taken back to England. So not a thrilling story by any means. And yet, judging by T-shirt sales, an upcoming annual, and Fury's presence in Strange Tales now, it seems as though this book was selling pretty well at the time. I guess that doesn't provide them with much of a reason to shake things up anytime soon.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 12, 2015 20:25:08 GMT -5
Strange Tales #136 "Find Fury or Die!" writer: Stan Lee layouts: Jack Kirby finishing: John Severin (first work on a Marvel comic since the Golden Age) letters: Artie Simek grade: B Once again, the struggle we saw between Stan and Jack in driving the Sgt. Fury title rears its head. While full of outlandishly imaginative spy stuff and some gorgeous visuals (particularly at the beginning), this is a generally silly story with lots of suspension of disbelief required in order to follow it, especially when an entire platoon of HYDRA soldiers are out on the streets of Manhattan in broad daylight, and yet no cops or National Guard forces show up to do anything about it. Clearly, Kirby just wanted to have fun with this one, just as he often wanted to do with Fury and the Howlers. And this issue certainly was fun, especially with the outlandishly booby-trapped barber shop Fury uses to throw off his pursuers, which takes up the bulk of the story. minor details: -Section W is mentioned for the first time as having created a weapon that hypnotizes others. I assume this is SHIELD's experimental weapons division. -This issue features the first appearance of "Slim" and two other unnamed SHIELD agents who assist Fury in the barbershop. While they play the roles of co-stars in this issue, I don't believe we'll ever see them again. Maybe that's the point -- every SHIELD agent is a hero worthy of having his/her own story told. Or maybe Stan or Jack just decided they didn't like them enough to keep using them. - I don't think we ever learn where HYDRA keeps finding its inexhaustable supply of middle managers clambering to step in as soon as their previous superior is murdered for failing once. I wonder if that aspect of Darth Vader was borrowed from this book, or if the arch villain who kills subordinates who fail was already an established arch type prior to this story. Plot synopsis in one long sentence: Fury is followed by HYDRA agents, he goes into a booby trapped barbershop where three other agents help him take down his pursuers, he uses an experimental weapon to convince the pursuers that SHIELD headquarters is in a nearby booby trapped warehouse, the HYDRA platoon goes in and is captured, and the HYDRA commander responsible for organizing this mission is killed for his failure, with a new agent rising to take his place.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 12, 2015 20:27:22 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos Annual #1 This issue includes two reprints ("Lord Ha-Ha's Last Laugh!" and "At the Mercy of Baron Strucker!") as well as supplemental features providing the names and faces of all the major characters and supporting cast and giving a basic look at Able Company's HQ and armament setup at the white cliffs of Dover. It also contains the following original story: "Commission in Korea!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Frankie Ray letters: Artie Simek grade: C+ As Tolworthy has repeatedly pointed out, this is the story that killed most of the potential the Sgt Fury series had. Whereas the unexpected deaths of first Junior and more recently Pam Hawley had shaken readers to their cores and proven that anything can happen in war, this story, set a full decade after the present day of the regular Sgt. Fury series, took away all of that dramatic uncertainty by showing all of the Howlers alive and well in the future. Not only, then, could no one die; no one new could be added to the cast either. Heck, everyone's still even wearing the same haircuts, though (thankfully) they all look slightly older (most noticeably Happy Sam). Here's what we learn about the future of the Howlers: - They all left the military after WWII - Sam was promoted to Colonel - Nick is promoted to Lieutenant at the end of the story (this aligns nicely with FF #21, which established that Nick remained a sergeant through the end of the war but had been promoted to colonel by 1964) - Dino, Gabe, Reb, Izzy, Percy, Dum-Dum, and Nick are all alive and well and have all reenlisted because of the Korean War. - Captain Savage (still unnamed, as this is only his third cameo appearance at this point) is still alive and has reenlisted as well. The story, itself, is pretty forgettable until the end. Stan clearly sees the North Koreans as yet another totally black and white set of evil villains for violating international law and crossing the 38th parallel, thereby putting Fury and crew in the right for doing whatever is necessary to take them down. As a result, the North Koreans are handled with the same joking disrespect as Stan and Dick always gave to the Nazis -- bumbling, cowardly, awed by what real heroes could do. the plot synopsis: The Howlers have reenlisted and are reassembled, they are ordered to sneak onto an illegal North Korean air base at the 38th parallel and blow it up, Happy Sam comes along and is surprisingly willing to hang back and lend command to Fury after having a bullet graze his shoulder, the Howlers win the day, and it turns out that Sam was hanging back in order to give Fury a chance to prove his leadership so that Sam could promote him to Lieutenant. A pretty forgettable story that, in terms of continuity, did far more harm than Stan could have possibly imagined at the time. Still, it was fun as always, watching Sam try to take down an entire Korean horde on his own while cornered was pretty cool, and the promotion at the end was kind of fun to see.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 13, 2015 19:44:00 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos #22 "Don't Turn Your Back on Bull McGiveney!" writer: Stan Lee pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Carl Hubbell letters: Artie Simek grade: B+ While the title of this story really doesn't apply to anything that occurs within, it functions as a pretty good message to the reader. Up until this point, Bull McGiveney has been an obnoxious, useless, and generally tiresome supporting character in the series, but this issue pretty much blows all of that out of the water, placing Bull and Fury in combat together, and showing just how surprisingly capable, brave, and smart McGiveney can be. This was a genuine surprise to me, and I enjoyed watching the two rivals work so damn well together. Add to that some extra impressive panels from Ayers this issue, capturing a lot of facial expression nuances and experimenting with showing figures shrouded in shadows as the people looking at them would see them, and this is a pretty solid issue. Of course, there are still tons of leaps of logic required to believe that the Howlers could pull off this ridiculously impossible mission, but you come to expect that from this mag. Probably the one downfall of this issue is Stan's need, once again, to keep with the theme of giving the Howlers teams of antagonists. McGiveney's Maulers are promised on the cover, but (in typical Stan fashion) they get very little panel time in the book and are never given discernable names nor characteristics. And, if that wasn't enough, Strucker and his Blitzkrieg bunch are dragged into the end of this story for no apparent reason and, once more, prove to be pathetic adversaries. Why does Stan feel the need to keep throwing entirely unimpressive teams of antagonists at the Howlers that he never takes the time to develop properly? As a final minor detail, it's worth mentioning that Stan and Dick insert themselves into this title for the second and third times, this issue. They were briefly depicted in the Sgt. Fury Annual on the page showing the layout of Able Company HQ, discussing what to do with their leave time. In this issue, they're both in the air force (not accurate) with Stan a commanding officer (accurate) and Dick a lowly underling (accurate). They first appear with Stan musing that he's going to write about the Howlers after the war and wants Dick to do the art, and they reappear at the end of the issue as the pilots who get the Howlers back to safety. plot synopsis in one long sentence: The Howlers and McGiveney's Maulers are sent deep into Romania to disable the heavily fortified anti-aircraft defenses so that the allied air force can execute the raid on Ploesti, the Nazis' major oil field. Fury and Bull are captured and made to fight each other to the death, but they execute a ruse together and join with their men in time to disable the fortifications, and Stan Lee and Dick Ayers fly them back to safety.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 13, 2015 19:44:17 GMT -5
Strange Tales #137 "The Prize is Earth!" writer: Stan Lee layouts: Jack Kirby art: John Severin lettering: Artie Simek grade: A The excitement only heats up with this issue. What begins with a single panel page of Fury's face over multiple monitors putting SHIELD on full alert from an all-out HYDRA attack on all nations of the world quickly speeds into high intensity espionage and assassination (all more fun when depicted via Kirby art), entire swarms of HYDRA troops from the land (and later the sea) moving in on their targets, and finally some bold insights into (and teasing clues regarding) The Supreme HYDRA Commander. Things move so fast that you barely have time to notice Dum-Dum and Gabe's introduction into the series in this issue, now working for SHIELD along with Fury (I assume he personally recruited them after #135). I wonder if the blonde man pictured with them is Reb. Regarding the identity of the Supreme Leader of HYDRA, we're given several clues. We absolutely know that he is on the board of Imperial Industries International and, in fact, has a connecting secret passage from the board room to his headquarters, but when new CEO Leslie Farrington orders Brown, his wimpish assistant, to secretly collect dossiers on every member of the board, we're left wondering whether this is because he's the Supreme Commander or because he suspects one of them is. I won't spoil the true answer here, but I will say that the revelation of the Supreme Commander's identity at the end of this story arc absolutely MADE this series for me. We also know the Supreme Commander was once penniless (it's implied that his wife would not have died if he'd had money/power), and that has been his motivation to amass all the wealth and power in the world. In typical Lee fashion, the concept is a rich one, but the characterization itself falls flat and cliche as he explains all of this to his daughter (who is reluctantly serving as a HYDRA agent). It's nice to see Stan and Jack having so much fun with the villains in this story. Certainly, inventing your own fictitious evil organization leaves a lot more room for creativity than in having them fight real world enemies like the Nazis. One moment in this story I really respected was the moving deaths of three agents in a (failed) attempt to smuggle a microfilm away from HYDRA. Their bravery, the sense of loss, and even the weird sense that their sacrifices weren't futile in spite of the failed effort, were moving and powerful in spite of the otherwise fun sense pervading this issue. Stan gave attention to the sacrifices of brave intermediaries who laid down their lives so that the heroes could have their day numerous times in the Sgt. Fury title, though never as tragically as here, with three outstanding agents all willingly sacrificing their lives in the line of duty AND the initiative failing anyway. It's worth noting the pacing of this series, thus far. Whereas most monthly comic book features feature self-contained stories (including Sgt. Fury), both this feature and Dr. Strange, it's sister Strange Tales title, are carefully unfolding a larger narrative. Whereas the previous two Agent of SHIELD installments were focused on establishing the threat of HYDRA, this issue introduces an immediate conflict and embellishes the HYDRA concept to include a mysterious central villain. Note that Fury, himself, has done next to nothing at this point, and that Dum-Dum and Gabe are first introduced here. You can be sure Stan and Jack are gearing up for a strike-back in which Fury finally goes into action, aided by some of his old Howlers, to take on HYDRA the old-fashioned way. There are TONS of minor logic gaps and far-fetched moments in this story, but I've come to expect that as fair game when reading this series and thus will not bother to draw attention to them so long as they don't disrupt the main plot of the story. One nagging question, though -- every time someone wants to make the HYDRA sign (twelve arms appearing to extend from one body), do four other guys have to run up behind him? There are NEVER four guys right behind the Commander when he does this. In fact, on page 11, the only two guys behind him are carrying torches. Do they just go, "Oh geez! He's making the sign again! Drop those torches! Floyd, Dave, get your butts over here!! Let's do this thing!" plot synopsis in one ridiculously long sentence: Fury puts SHIELD on high alert to drop everything and make HYDRA their prime target since it is about to strike (though this doesn't really make sense when you consider that it doesn't take an entire agency to stop one bomb), Fury visits Weapons Design (no longer called Section W) and is given some fun spy equipment including the memorable bullet-proof suit, a turncoat HYDRA agent attempts to smuggle some microfilm to SHIELD, this ends up costing the lives of three SHIELD agents, and HYDRA's troops end up stopping them anyway, we learn that HYDRA is going to launch a betatron bomb into space ( ) so that they can dictate terms to the entire planet, Fury, Dum-Dum, and Gabe are on their way to find it in the Balkins, we meet Leslie Farrington, new CEO of Imperial Industries International, and learn that someone on the board of that company is the Supreme Leader of HYDRA, we get a backstory on the Supreme Leader (though we do not learn his identity), and the betatron bomb is launched. EXCITING ISSUE! And, while it has its minor flaws, it doesn't pretend to take itself so seriously that you should be concerned with such things. Rather, it's an incredibly fun and imaginative romp with some real intelligent mystery thrown into it to keep you guessing and some powerful/meaningful moments as well. In short, this is everything a 1960s Marvel comic should aspire to be.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 13, 2015 19:45:38 GMT -5
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos #23 "The Man Who Failed!" writer: Stan Lee Pencils: Dick Ayers inks: Frank Ray letters: Artie Simek grade: C+ It's inevitable. The better the Agent of SHIELD story, the more bored I become by the following Sgt. Fury story, no matter how good it is. In this case, we have a reasonably good Sgt. Fury story that tries to do a few interesting things, but I was so bored that I had to take numerous breaks from it. Maybe I'm just not a war mag guy. Whatever the case, I liked this series well enough until Agent of SHIELD started offering me a far more exciting story featuring the same central protagonist. Regarding this issue, there are four things about it that make it stand out from other Sgt. Fury issues: 1. Children involved. We've had one previous story in which a child showed up, but he was an aspiring soldier who sought conflict. In this case, we have far younger innocent children, protected by a fearless nun, who look at the Howers as saviors (well, not sacrilegiously) and who bring out some of their humanity in contrast, which is pretty much as adorable as it had the potential to be. Dum-Dum, in particular, admits that he's terrified of children (an amusing yet believable comment) and then quickly warms up to them. I also loved Gabe making the little guy on his back promise that, if Gabe doesn't make it out of this alive, to "study the trumpet when ya grow up! You got a great pair of lungs, little fella!" However, it's interesting that we only see the children's reactions when the Howlers are winning. While this creates a great feel-good sense, it's hard to miss the omission of NOT seeing these kids react when doom seems inevitable. 2. A closer look at the Japanese. Though the Howlers have fought the Japanese before (two times now, I believe) this is the first time that Lee gives them the same level of attention he gives to the Nazis, depicting conversations between their superior and lower soldiers in which ideologies and assumptions are revealed. While it was rarely disturbing to see how simplistically and foolishly Lee depicted the Nazis (after all, it was more a reflection of a political party/ideology that had swept the nation than a reflection of the German people themselves), the depiction of the Japanese in this story, in which they must commit hari-kari whenever they fail, care nothing about harming innocents, and even make up elaborate and unnecessary lies to justify burning missionaries and killing their occupants for no particular reason, absolutely comes off as a reflection of the race. Unfortunately, this was a pretty widely accepted double-standard about the war, depicted in much of its propaganda. However, Lee actually manages to make the depiction even more offensive while trying to do just the opposite when he has Fury say this of the Japanese commanding officer: "I ain't got the heart [to kill him], Corporal! He can't help bein' the way he is -- He don't know no better! But he's sure got all the courage a guy could want. Mebbe when he wakes up, somebody'll be able ta drum some sense into 'im--somehow--!"Essentially, the Japanese are depicted as naive children playing at war, too foolish to know any better. Subsequently, the entire idea of the Howlers courting the innocent Burmese children throughout the issue seems related to this idea -- attempting to educate the next generation of non-allied Asians to be less child-like than its predecessors (See, Dan? I used the word correctly this time!) And, perhaps the most offensive segment of the entire issue (though certainly not seen that way at the time): Little Burmese girl to Fury: Me love you, Yonkee! You so big and pretty! Yes, but will she love him long time? 3. Religious issues raised in this story. It's hard to miss the fact that the virtuous heroine of this story is a Catholic nun (albeit a young and attractive one). A purposeful ideological subtext to this story is revealed when, in response to the Japanese commander's assertion that his race will one day be supreme, she comments that "You are wrong, general! There is but ONE supreme being in the universe!" suggesting that part of what makes Americans right in this war is their humility and god-fearing nature. Of course, this gets more interesting when one considers that Lee is Jewish. In fact, he brings this to the forefront of the story by the close as Izzy (always implied to be Jewish, but it has never outright been stated) comments, "Sister, we don't pray in the same church, but you're okay in MY book," and, in the final line of dialogue in the final panel of the story, seemingly arbitrarily reminds her that it's "Cohen, not Cohan!" Of course, one is a Jewish last name, and one is not. 4. Percy's characterization. There's a lot going on with Percy in this one, and it extends beyond the origin story he's finally given here. Much as with Izzy, Stan has spent time hinting that Percy stands apart from the mainstream in some sense (specifically that he might be gay), and Lee seems to struggle with this possibility in the story. On the one hand, Stan and Dick make a deliberate (albeit subtle) point about Percy being the ONLY Howler who does not take well to the children, bothered by their playing with his umbrella and being the only one not to pair up with an individual child later in the story. While, in modern society, the idea of being gay is not necessarily consistent with not wanting kids, that seems to be an assumption that Lee and Ayers were taking here. Even Percy's utter shame at the mention of the leader of the Burma Dragons arouses suspicions. If this were a modern day story, my first guess would have been that this man had been an ex lover of his. Certainly, that's the feel I get from Percy's bashful reactions. And, ultimately, when we learn that Percy was kicked out of the officers' academy for his lifestyle choices and felt he'd disgraced his family, this brings a whole other guess to mind. And yet, in Percy's origin story, Percy describes his past self as having been "more interested in good times, pretty girls, and fast times" than his studies. Truly, none of that characterization aligns with the Percy we've known all throughout these stories and sounds like an overkill effort to make Percy seem like a regular, red-blooded heterosexual man. And yet, it's hard to miss that look on Percy's face in the second to last panel when his brother talks about them having grandkids. Truly, which is more believable -- that Percy was kicked out of the academy and feared disgracing his family due to a lifestyle of fast partying and loose women, or that he was a sensitive and serious soldier who also happened to be gay? Not sure what the story behind this issue is; whether there was a difference of opinion between Lee and Ayers, Lee and the powers that be, or simply in Lee's own head, but there's some clear indecision about Percy here, even as this origin story seeks to finally explain who he is to us. minor details: I find it hard to believe that the Japanese military would work so hard to pursue one nun and her charges just for practicing religion (what a waste of resources!), I fail to understand what the Japanese commander gained by lying about why he wanted her, and while I love Lee's belief in our government, I can't imagine that an outfit like The Howlers would be tapped for such a low priority mission when all out war was waging across the globe. This just feels like an over-simplified demonizing of the Japanese (nun and children killers!) and an over-simplified glorifying of the Allies (protectors of nuns and children)! This is all a stereotype going back to the medieval code of chivalry, in which knights were to be the protectors of widows, orphans, and the faith. Clever how we spend most of the story believing the title pertains to the Japanese officer told to bring in the Howlers and warned not to fail, and yet it ends up pertaining to Percy. Best line of the story: Fury: Pinkerton, I figger we'll make a Howler outta you yet!
Percy: I say! All this time I thought I was teaching you!plot synopsis: Fury and the gang are sent to Berma to rescue a nun and her Bermese orphans, all being pursued by a Japanese commander who claims they carry stolen Axis plans, Percy provides a reluctant origin story about his dismissal from officers' academy and the shame that brought him, and Percy is reunited with his brother, leader of the Berma Dragons, who tells him he's proud of what Percy has accomplished.
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