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The stories collected in one of DC Comics's final "Edge" line titles, GI Combat Vol. 1: The War That Time Forgot, seemed to me to be an attempt to grab the audience that didn't quite cotton to Men of War by telling war stories with a little more superheroics than Men of War had. "War That Time Forgot," "Unknown Soldier," and "Haunted Tank" are all war concepts with a twist, and as someone who enjoys faux reality superhero titles like Checkmate and Gotham Central, I held some optimism for GI Combat.

Even as the writers here are accomplished -- JT Krul, Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti, and Peter Tomasi is a good group -- GI Combat never quite emerges as a cohesive package. It is at times too flip, at times too brief; it is constantly dark and bloody; and it's also adrenaline-soaked ad nauseam. Maybe this is the aesthetic of war comics and war comics just aren't for me, but I couldn't recommend this volume.

[Review contains spoilers]

The best thing about the titular story, "The War That Time Forgot," by JT Krul and artist Ariel Olivetti, is the dinosaurs, and possibly they're the best thing about this whole book. Olivetti's dinosaurs are realistic, scaly, and fearsome, and the whole thing left me with a craving for a Jurassic Park re-watch. Unfortunately, the humans in Olivetti's panels aren't depicted as well; at some times the characters seem to stare off into space, and at other times script and art seem to get away from one another with extra panels where the characters just stand or point.

Krul's characters Stevens and Elliott are the first example of the book's adrenaline-soaked aesthetic, two manly men fighting to get home to their wives (there are women in GI Combat but they rarely if ever take a combat role). It's almost comical when Elliott can't understand why Stevens gives a gun to a North Korean solider trapped on the dinosaur island with them rather than just killing the man in cold blood.

In a twist vaguely Lost-esque, Elliott sets off from the island in a raft into monster-infested waters, thinking Stevens dead, while Stevens slowly loses his humanity ... and then the story ends. For whatever reason DC decided to switch the title's contents at that time, it brings the story to a close seemingly without closure. I had hoped for an acknowledgment, at least, that this dinosaur island was the same as seen in then-recent issues of Teen Titans, but such is never addressed.

Gray and Palmiotti's "Unknown Solider" is to some extent a Boondock Saints-type piece, in which the superhuman Solider kills legions of terrorists, drug dealers, and madmen without much difficulty, and the vicarious "enjoyment," if any, is watching the bad guys get theirs. "Soldier" is the most thoughtful of the three stories, as it were, delving into the mystery of the Soldier and whether he is a wounded security contractor or the reincarnation of an Unknown Solider that's fought in every war; unfortunately the authors tease here more than they reveal. The story tries to interject a "not all Muslims are terrorists" message, but it comes off less authentic and more apologetic for the disturbing amount of Middle Eastern-looking men that the Soldier murders in these pages.

"Unknown Solider" is ultimately both too long and too short for what it tries to accomplish. There's a storyline regarding how the Soldier's handler Agent Komal has implanted him with false memories, but nothing comes of it because, in the backup story format, the action is focused on the Soldier to the exception of everything else, as opposed to how an ongoing series might be. At the same time, the main action grows ever more bloated and complicated, as the Soldier hunts a foreign terrorist that turns out to be related to domestic gun smuggling that turns into a plot to destabilize the financial markets being run out of a video game company. Almost the exact same scene happens twice in two issues as the Soldier is uncovered as a secret agent; the "mole" selling state secrets is exactly who the reader would think it is, the disgruntled agent who gets mad at Komal earlier.

And then the story ends. The Unknown Solider accidentally kills a target he was supposed to capture, then suddenly he's gone back to the house where he used to live, meets the family that lives there now, and that's the end. Is the Unknown Soldier a man or a reincarnated spirit? Does he still work for AMMO (as if the DC Universe needed another acronymmed organization) or what are the consequences of his latest mishap? The reader never finds out, though here, at least, the Soldier's adventures continue into Suicide Squad (what brought me here in the first place).

"Haunted Tank" is by Tomasi with art by Howard Chaykin, which I'll acknowledge is a fairly epic combination. I've never quite been able to get into Chaykin's art though, personally, going back to some of the weirdness on his Hawkgirl title. But on the second page of the "Tank" story, for instance, there's these spheres on the ground in Jeb Stuart's front lawn. Are they mines? Ant traps? Why does one seem to float half off the ground by the boy's leg in the first panel of that page? A small thing, sure, but immediately I felt no more comfortable with Chaykin's art in this story than I had before.

Tomasi's story, in which the elder Stuart and the Haunted Tank rescue Stuart's grandson before he passes on the Tank legacy, is very occasionally moving, though more often befuddling. The initial sequence in which the Tank bowls over cars on the way from Argus's Black Room to Stuart's house is comical, though perhaps it's not intended to be, reminding me of something out of Herbie, the Love Bug. The elder Stuart spends the entire story shirtless, often with an American flag falling across his bare back like a cape; it comes off ludicrous (even a hair offensive), and again I'm not sure that was the intent. As with "Unknown Solider," there's a bevy of gunshots, stabbings, and the amputation of limbs here; Steve Trevor makes an appearance in Agents of SHIELD fashion, but it's not enough to save a story that just doesn't come together (though this one, at least, has a conclusive ending).

In considering GI Combat Vol. 1: The War That Time Forgot, I'm put in mind of Sword of Sorcery Vol. 1: Amethyst, a collection of another of DC's recent anthology series, also cancelled, and collecting three stories. Sword of Sorcery, however, gave us strong characters and stories to get into; "Amethyst" was very detailed and "Beowulf" was creative and well-drawn; for the record, "Beowulf" was pretty bloody, too. But while Sword of Sorcery felt like an adventure, GI Combat comes off very dank, with page after page of the heroes of the pieces killing armies of villains. Maybe this book is for someone else, but it wasn't for me.

[Includes original and variant covers, sketchbook section of covers, characters, and layouts]

Coming up, Worlds' Finest.
I think the American Comics Group did a fine job of using a small number of titles to keep the company afloat during both boom and bust years of comic books. It started as Better or Nedor, and its early history is documented elsewhere. You can read about it in this preview PDF of Alter Ego #61, with a fascinating article by Michael Vance. When ACG came up with its supernatural titles, Adventures Into the Unknown and Forbidden Worlds, they became the two books that were their mainstays, and would take them to the end of their history in 1967.

The supernaturals, as assistant editor Norman Fruman called them, sold quite well, and ACG added Skeleton Hand, which didn’t make the crossover to a Comics Code-approved book (probably because of its title), Out of the Night, and a one-shot issue of The Clutching Hand, which isn’t identified as ACG on its cover. That’s likely because ACG was trying out stories that didn’t have the boy-girl happy endings that a lot of their “horror” stories did. Fruman is listed as editor of The Clutching Hand. According to one bio I read of Fruman, he wrote about 700 scripts for Better/Nedor/ACG.

Here are examples of the two styles, one with the happy ending, and one more typical of the horror comics from other publishers.

From Forbidden Worlds #17 (1953), drawn by Al Camy:








From The Clutching Hand (1954), drawn by Kenneth Landau:






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More Ken Landau, including a pre-Code story from Out of the Night, and a story for the very last issue of Forbidden Worlds in 1967. Just click the thumbnail.




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It’s been a generation since Li’l Abner disappeared from newspapers. It was 1977 when creator/writer/artist Al Capp, sick with emphysema from a lifetime of smoking, shut down the strip. It, like Capp, had been in decline for some time. Capp died two years later, in 1979.

The strip was one of the most popular comic strips during the period of the thirties through at least the mid-sixties. It even influenced popular culture. Sadie Hawkins' Day, which is the subject of today’s post, became an annual event at some colleges and high schools. Up until 1952 Li’l Abner avoided being caught by Daisy Mae.

As biographical information about Capp shows, he had a troubled life and probably had personality disorders which caused him to be a total jerk at times,and then a generous, funny and friendly person at others. Maybe sitting at a drawing board for over 40 years, putting out sharp and oftentimes savage satire — Capp was a conservative when he died, but as a former liberal he still had a stinging view of the rich — will do that to a guy. Speaking of savage, the little character in this story who straps dynamite to his chest is a lot closer to today’s world than that of Li’l Abner.

I have shown this before, several years ago. These are new scans. From Al Capp’s Li'l Abner #74 (1950):


























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Cartoonist Mel Lazarus (Miss Peach, Momma was an editor at Toby Press, which published this comic. The company was founded in 1949 by Capp’s brother, Elliott Caplin. This page of gag cartoons by Lazarus is from the inside front cover of the issue.
More Li’l Abner is available at the Hairy Green Eyeball blog, including Li’l Abner Sundays from 1960 and reprint strips of Li’l Abner that appeared in newspaper in 1988 and 1989: Part 1 and Part 2.