Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Comic Cuts - 31 December 2013

Well, that was fun.

I haven't done a jot of work for a week unless you count the Jose Ortiz piece published a couple of days ago . . . OK, I haven't done any paid work. Instead, I have been enjoying life in the bosom of my family and eaten my own bodyweight in roast potatoes and Christmas pudding. We managed to exercise off a sprout or two going for what is euphemistically called a "walk" but which turned out to be an arm-wrenching half-hour  being dragged around the neighbourhood by my sister Julie's new dog. Otherwise, we sat around, chatting and laughing and watching a bit of TV.

It was rather sad to hear on Christmas Eve that Jose Ortiz had died as he was one of the best of the Spanish artists who worked for British comics. I'll follow up yesterday's post with another series of "Caroline Baker" later in the week as it's a strip that doesn't often receive any coverage.

Have a happy new year in 2014.

Bear Alley Books: Bestsellers of 2013

Of everything I've done with Bear Alley, Bear Alley Books is my proudest achievement. Here's a list of our top-selling titles for 2013. In a not so surprising change since the last top-sellers list, the latest books prove to be outselling the old books. But I'm pleased to say that some of the older books, even those dating back a couple of years, continue to sell, even if in small numbers.










No. 13/14 = Eagles Over the Western Front Vol. 2 / Vol. 3





Monday, December 30, 2013

Caroline Baker, Barrister at Law

Here's a short series featuring Caroline Baker, Barrister at Law, written by Willie Patterson and drawn by the late Jose Ortiz. I'll re-run another, longer Caroline Baker yarn in a couple of days time.

(* © Express Newspapers Ltd.)

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Jose Ortiz Moya (1932-2013)

Jose Ortiz in 2012, with the Grand Prize of the Barcelona International Comic-Con

Jose Ortiz, whose sixty years as a comic strip artist encompassed a thirty-year span working for British comics, has died on Monday, 23 December at the age of 81. Feeling ill, he had been admitted to La Fe hospital in Valencia a week before he died of heart failure. Of all the Spanish artists who found themselves working for British publishers during the British comics' boom of the 1950s and 1960s, José Ortiz was one of the longest survivors. Such is his longevity, that he has fans for each of the decades he worked in the UK: those who grew up in the 1960s will remember his as the artist of countless war libraries as well as “UFO Agent” and its sequel “Smokeman” in Eagle; fans in the 1970s are more likely to remember his work in nursery or girls comics or his eight month run as the artist of "The Persuaders" in TV Action; in the 1980s he helped relaunch the Eagle with fantasies "The Tower King" and "The Fifth Horseman" and went on to draw the long-running horror series "The Thirteenth Floor" and various tales of the genetically-adapted warrior "Rogue Trooper".

At the same time, Ortiz is widely recognised as one of the masters of comic art in his native Spain as the artist of "Hombre" and "Burton y Cyb" and one of the most popular contributors to the American horror magazines published by James Warren.

Born José Ortiz Moya in Cartagena, Murcia, Spain, on 1 September 1932, the son of a painter of watercolours, he was the younger brother of Leopoldo Ortiz by almost exactly two years, but the two progressed through the comics industry almost in parallel during the 1950s. After winning a competition held by Chicos magazine, at the age of 16 Ortiz began working for Manuel Gago's Editorial Maga publishing company on the series El Espia [The Spy] in 1951, which he signed Zitro (Ortiz backwards). Gago was the hugely popular creator of "El Guerrero del Antifaz" [The Warrior Mask] and had moved to Valencia, where the strip was published by Juan Bautista Sorianos' Editorial Valencia. Ortiz and others — Leopoldo Ortiz and Luis Bermejo amongst them — joined Gago, Miguel Quesada and Pastor Eduardo Vañó in Valencia, helping to establish what has become known as the Escuela Valenciana or Valencian school of art.

Ortiz worked extensively for Editorial Maga for the next decade, working on El Capitan Don Nadie [Captain Don Nobody] (1952), El Principe Pablo [Prince Paul] (covers only, 1953-54), Coleccion Comandos (1954), Sebastián Vargas (1954), Don Barry, El Terremoto [Dan Barry, Earthquake] (1954), Balin (1955), Pantera Negra [Black Panther] (1956), El duque negro [The Black Duke] (1957), Apache (1958), Bengala (1959) and Johnny Fogata (1960). Of these, Ortiz was probably best-known for the western adventures of Don Barry, which ran for 76 issues and 3 'annuals' in 1954-57; Ortiz also drew the first 31 issues of another popular western, Johnny Fogata.

By the late 1950s, Ortiz was also establishing himself with other publishers, such as Toray, with such strips as Sigur el Wikingo [Sigur the Viking] and stories of the wild west in the anthology Hazañas del Oeste; for Bruguera he produced stories for Bisonte Extra Ilustrada, distributed almost exclusively in Argentina, and adaptations for Colección Historias such as "Los Viajes de Gulliver" [Gulliver's Travels] and "Las Cruzadas" [The Crusades].

Ortiz had made his British debut in 1957 with "In Love's Trap" in D. C. Thomson's early romantic pocket library Love and Life; other early sales to Golden Heart Pocket Library, Thriller Picture Library and Top Spot followed, but it was 1960 before he established himself as a regular in Ted Bensberg's war libraries department, producing three dozen stories for War, Battle, War at Sea and Air Ace libraries between 1960-67. In 1962-63 he drew the short-lived "Caroline Baker, Barrister-at-Law" for the Daily Express, preparing for the task of illustrating the adventures of a female lawyer by coming to the UK and making sketches at a magistrate's court.

In 1964, Ortiz took over the character of John Brody for Boys' World and produced "The Green Men" in colour on the rear page for seven weeks. He later took over the adventures of "UFO Agent" Major Grant in the original Eagle, which, exploiting the popularity for American superheroes that followed the appearance of the Batman TV show, became the superhero "Smokeman", then, when that bubble burst within the year, became a member of the C.I.D. When "Grant (C.I.D.)" came to an end, Ortiz continued to work for Eagle on the aerial pirates yarn, "Sky Buccaneers".

Ortiz also found work in the pages of Lion where he drew "Trelawny's Mob", "The Phantom Viking" and "The 10,000 Disasters of Dort" over the next couple of years. However, he found himself in something of a backwater after that, drawing one-off romantic stories for Valentine and Romeo and illustrations and fairy tales for Once Upon a Time. He was offered the more action-oriented strip "The Persuaders", based on the TV show, in the pages of TV Action and was drawing for D. C. Thomson's Diana and Warlord when the opportunity came to work for James Warren's magazines in the USA.

Ortiz's agent, Josep Toutain of Selecciones Illustrades, created for publication in Spain and in the US in the early 1970s and - like many of his contemporaries - Ortiz saw the American market as a way of escaping the strictures of the British comics' market and earn a better return for his efforts. With James Warren's horror comics Vampirella, Eerie and others, he found the market he was looking for and, as David Roach records in The Warren Companion, "At Warren he embraced the 'new look' with relish to produce a succession of superbly-drawn stories such as "Coffin", "Jackass", and his masterpiece, "The Apocalypse" (which ran in Eerie #62-65). This looked like it wasn't so much inked as feverishly scratched out of a morass of black ink and seething textures." He was named Warren's Best All Around Artist in 1974.

Although Ortiz could not maintain this intensity, he became Warren's most prolific artist, contributing 119 strips to the Warren magazines, abandoning the UK market but maintaining a presence in Spain and Europe with strips such as "El Cuervo" for Kung-Fu (1976), "Los Grandes Mitos del Oeste" [Great Myths of the West] (1978) and El Nuevo Tarzan (1979-81).

As the Warren magazines lost circulation, Ortiz found a new market in Spain where new comics aimed at an older audience such as Cimoc, for which Ortiz teamed up with Antonio Segura on the science fiction series "Hombre" in 1981. The series portrayed a post-Apocalypse society that has developed following the collapse of civilised society. The series, a futuristic twist on the Spaghetti Western, sees the man known only as Hombre travelling from city to city, encountering survivors often banded together as small communities for protection against the hostile environment and marauding bands.

In 1983 he teamed up with his nephew Leopoldo Sanchez who, with writer Mariano Hispano,was co-founder of Ediciones Metropol; Ortiz contributed a number of strips to their three titles, Metropol, Mocambo and KO Comics, including "Hombre" in the latter. Although Ediciones Metropol lasted only a year, Ortiz was able to concentrate on contributing strips to the new adult comics published by Toutain Editor, such as "Las mil caras de Jack el Destripador" [Jack the Ripper] (1984) for Creepy, and Norma Editorial. In 1987 he created, with Segura, "Burton y Cyb" for Zona 84 (and, later, Comix Internacional) and "Morgan", which debuted as "Ives" in Metropol before being revived in Cimoc.

During the same period, Ortiz was a regular presence in the revived Eagle in Britain, producing a run of comic strips for the newly relaunched boys' photo-weekly: "The Tower King", "The House of Daemon" nad "The Fifth Horseman". The paper soon became a more regular comic, for which Ortiz continued to contribute "The Amstor Computer", "News Team" and the long-running "The Thirteenth Floor", which debuted in Scream! in 1984 and continued in Eagle & Scream! until 1987.

Ortiz also contributed to 2000AD, mostly illustrating "Rogue Trooper", but also single episodes of "The Helltrekkers" and "Judge Dredd" (1987). His last strips in the UK were "Kid Cops" for Eagle (1988) nad "Kitten Magee" in WildCat and the merged Eagle & WildCat (1988-89). Contemporarily, he also briefly worked on Sabre for Eclipse and a number of stories appeared in Heavy Metal.

In the early 1990s Ortiz drew "Bud O'Brien" (for Torpedo) and "Ozone" (for L'Eternauta), and contributed two volumes to a lavish collection of books from Planeta-Deagostini with the overall title Tales of the New World: #2 La civilización Inca: Los Hijos del Sol (1991) and #25 Orígenes del hombre Americano: Los Primeros (1992).

“Hombre” had continued to appear in Cimoc until the 1990s but Spanish comics suffered a collapse in popularity in that decade following the Golden Age of the 1980s. Subsequently, Ortiz spent twenty years working for Sergio Bonelli on the famous Italian western Tex. He has also drawn episodes of "Ken Parker" and "Magico Vento" [Magic Wind] for their respective titles. The latter is currently being reprinted in Italy as Magico Vento Deluxe and in English translation by Epicenter Comics in the USA, with volume 1 published in June 2013 and volume 3 due to appear in January 2014 (volume two was by other hands).

In 1998, Ortiz was awarded the Parparajote de Oro by the Asociación de Amigos del Tebeo de la Región de Murcia.

Recently, Ortiz produced a colour episode, “La dimora stregara” [The Haunted House], penned by Andrea Cavaletto, for Dylan Dog Color Fest (2012).

In May 2012, Ortiz was awarded the Grand Prize—the Gran Premio del Salón—at the 30th Barcelona International Comics Convention in recognition of his brilliant career; a retrospective exhibition took place at the following year’s Comic-Con in April 2013.



The second volume of a complete collection of “Hombre”, was published by Editorial EDT Editores de Tebeos in November.

(* photo: http://www.ficomic.com)

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Staying Sane part 3: Music


Frost* - Hyperventilate

I've always played music while I work. Some writers need silence and the slightest noise can break their train of thought. I've always taken the opposite view: a well-loved piece of music that you're familiar with is no more distracting than wallpaper. Maybe it's because I've lived and worked near busy roads with a steady stream of human traffic as well as noisy buses and lorries rumbling past. The familiar music drowns those distractions out for me.

My trick is to play music while I'm writing and listen to comedy, drama or feature material while I'm working on artwork because the bit of your brain used for writing is also the bit of your brain you use to interpret other people's words. A few years ago, while I was working on an introduction to a book, I managed to play an hour and a half radio drama based on an Agatha Christie novel, but I was concentrating so hard that, when it finished, I had no idea who had been murdered, let alone who had done it.

If you find yourself distracted by words, soundtracks to movies or classical music will do the trick.

Being an old Prog Rock fan, I often drift back to that while I'm writing as there are often long musical interludes. Looking at the number of plays on my iPlayer, I find that my most popular album of 2013 is Big Big Train's English Electric Part 2. If you're new to BBT, they have been around for over twenty years but are going through something of a golden age at the moment which started with the release of The Underfall Yard in 2009 and the EP Far Skies, Deep Time (2010). There next release was a two-part album, English Electric which works best as a single, double-album unit, with tracks ranging from joyful and lively to the melancholic.

The two albums have recently been released in a two-CD pack under the title English Electric: Full Power with four extra tracks, the latter also available on a separate EP, Make Some Noise (the title track of which can be heard/seen at their official website). You can also download the full 23 minute title track from The Underfall Yard for free.

Being a freelance writer means that you spend a fair amount of time broke, but there are plenty of options available to legally listen to stuff. Here in the UK you have access to dozens of radio stations: every BBC or commercial station broadcasts in digital these days and live streams over the internet. Take a look at the stations available. . . I'm sure you'll be able to find one to suit your tastes.

If that doesn't suit you and you want to be able to pick and chose your music, why not try Spotify. It's free as long as you don't mind the occasional advert and you can always subscribe if the adverts get too much. They're pretty good at picking up on new albums and have a huge back catalogue (recently added to with the arrival of Led Zeppelin). Dig around and you'll discover a lot of obscure bands that you might enjoy.

If you like something a little more off the beaten track, you could do worse than try Jamendo, which includes hundreds of independently produced albums and tracks. I've found some very interesting musicians over the past couple of years. My favourites are SaReGaMa, who have released a handful of albums; if you want to try one of their instrumental tracks, here's a nice one to start with, Clouds Fly As I Smile.

Another set of instrumental albums has been produced by Zero-Project—actually a Greek guy called Nikos—who composes electronic ambient music. It makes excellent background music. . . and all for free unless you want to donate something.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Staying Sane part 2: Having a Laugh

Is there anyone who would say "Me!" to the question "Who doesn't like a good laugh?" I'm sure there's some Grinch out there currently thanking thanking whatever deity he believes in that Christmas is over for another year. Bah! Humbug!

Comedy and music probably fill most of the hours of my day: in the evenings we watch quite a few comedy shows, some of which I mentioned yesterday. We tend to follow what are nowadays called comedy-quizes—the kind of show that ends up on Dave. So: QI, Would I Lie To You, Have I Got News For You, Mock The Week, Never Mind The Buzzcocks, 8 Out Of 10 Cats, Was It Something I Said . . plus Stand Up For The Week, which has a structure but no quiz element.

There were a few new sitcoms that proved worth watching this year such as Graham Linehan's re-imagining of Count Arthur Strong's Radio Show with Steve Delaney, Matt Berry's Toast of London, which was wonderfully silly, Man Down with Greg Davies, which is just as daft, Hebburn, a rather warmer, gentler family comedy (actually from late 2012 but for various reasons not watched until early 2013) and the massively camp and highly comic Vicious starring Ian McKellan and Derek Jacobi. All will be returning in 2014.

I was sad to see that Heading Out with Sue Perkins and the lovely Nicola Walker wasn't picked up for a second series. It was rather buried in the schedule—ten o'clock at night on a Tuesday on BBC2—when it should have been on in the 8.30 pm Friday slot, where it would probably have found an audience. I also loved It's Kevin, full of Kevin Eldon's often surreal and unexpected whimsy—preceded by a radio show, Kevin Eldon Will See You Now, that I have to admit left me cold.

One of the big hits of the year, and rightly so, was The Wrong Mans, a comic action-adventure starring James Corden and Matthew Baynton, which we enjoyed. I also enjoyed Ambassadors with David Mitchell and Robert Webb, which I hope was successful enough to merit another season as three episodes was far too few; it was just beginning to go places when it stopped.

I am glad to see that one of my favourites of the year has been given a second series: Badults is about three friends sharing a flat. . . after which it isn't so easy to describe. Two of the flatmates have failed to grow up and the one who thinks he's grown up isn't very good at it. That's the starting point for plenty of daft fun from messrs. Matthew Crosby, Tom Parry and Ben Clark, a.k.a. Pappy's Fun Club.

I first encountered this lot on a podcast, Pappy's Flatshare Slamdown, which I love. It's infectious, exuberant entertainment from three irrepressible funsters and their guests that has developed its own set of internal jokes. So if you're going to listen, start from the beginning (all episodes can be found at the British Comedy Guide's Pappy's Flatshare Slamdown page - scroll down to the bottom of the page to find the earliest episodes. And you should also give their sketch comedy a try with the Bangers and Mash podcast.

My other podcast hero is Richard Herring, who produces more free stuff than should ever be expected of one man. From As It Occurs To Me, through Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast to his Leicester Square Theatre Podcast, Herring has led the podcast "revolution"—in inverted commas because many have tried but few have managed to keep going. Herring, on the other hand, has used his free work (which includes a daily blog, which he also podcasts via Soundcloud and iTunes) to help expand the audience for his stand up shows and earn him radio and TV work, which is where he earns his money, promptly ploughed back into other experiments. His Leicester Square Theatre shows have been filmed and are available as single or series downloads via Go Faster Stripe. The cash generated is being used to film a sketch/interview show under the title Richard Herring's Meaning of Life, the first episode of which has been filmed and due for release some time early next year.

Other podcasts worth listening to. . . well, there's The Comedian's Comedian, in which Stuart Goldsmith digs into areas you wouldn't always go in an interview, asking about writing methods and how jokes are constructed or, sometimes, how they can grow organically; or Answer Me This where Helen Zaltzman and Olly Mann answer any questions asked by listeners, from the origins of certain words to relationship advice, all with the aid of Martin the Sound Man; or The Bugle, which has more puns per second than any other podcast thanks to the pun-run talents of Andy Zaltzman (yes, brother of Helen) and John Oliver (the guy who took over Jon Stewart's The Daily Show recently); or The Smartest Man In The World podcast where Greg Proops will talk about any subject on the planet, especially if it involves the negro baseball league.

Do a search on iTunes as it's very easy to subscribe to all of these and they'll be delivered to your iPlayer each week. And while you're there try subscribing to things like The Infinite Monkey Cage, More or Less or Tim Harford's Pop-Up Ideas which are also well worth listening to.

More tomorrow.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Staying Sane part 1: My Favourite TV of 2013

[This started off as a "Best of the Year" feature, but it rather ran away from me. The first part sticks fairly closely to describing the TV I liked in 2013; the next two parts ramble through a few things I like to listen to while I'm working and how that works for me, with links to a few free things you can find on the internet if you're a broke freelancer. Not what I intended, but what the hell. . . hopefully there will be something that will interest you enough to give it a try.]

Working from home can have its advantages and disadvanages. One is the easy access to distractions like TV. We don't have Sky, so that limits Mel and I to terrestrial channels. As we only have a couple of hours of an evening to watch TV and we don't watch TV every evening, there's usually enough on the tele to keep us going, especially since I introduced her to the foreign language shows on BBC Four.

As I'm at home, I have a habit of picking up box-sets of shows we don't watch together, so I have been catching up on shows like Fringe, which I never saw as it was broadcast on Sky. Some shows I've drifted away from: I used to follow CSI and CSI: New York religiously, for instance, but haven't had much time for them since we moved three years ago. The last series of CSI I watched was series 9 and they're now up to series 14 with Ted Danson in the lead; I drifted away from CSI: New York at the same time, so probably saw up to season 5. I will have to catch up with both shows at some point.

I got caught up with BBC Four's Danish crime dramas from the beginning and persuaded Mel to watch The Killing II after picking up the first series box-set. We have been hooked ever since, our joint favourite being The Bridge, which returns in early January and which is currently being repeated. However, in 2013, I think our favourite had to be Inspector Montalbano and the spin-off Young Montalbano, both of which had so many good points that I don't want to pick one over the other. Luca Zingaretti set a high bar for the grumpy gastronome, but Michele Riondino tackled the role of his younger self with aplomb.

The mysteries are fun, the characters great and it's lovely to bask in the Sicilian sunshine.We've now caught up with all the shows that have been broadcast in Italy, so let's just hop that they keep turning them out. I've recently picked up a couple of the books, which Mel has enjoyed and which I'm planning to read the first chance I get (although they're still way down the pile!).

I guess Broadchurch was the show that kept us both on the edge of the sofa this year. We knew Chris Chibnall's work for Doctor Who and this had the right balance of suspense and homeliness to keep it from being too dark. There were some notable flops like Mayday and I must admit that I wasn't that impressed by Top of the Lake, although others seemed to like the latter. It will be good to see David Tennant and the wonderful Olivia Colman back together again in the new year.

Olivia Colman is pretty much a sign that a programme will be good: The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, Twenty-Twelve and a top notch performance in The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot. I have similar attitude to Nicola Walker who put in two terrific turns this year in Heading Out (Sue Perkins' delightful comedy) and, at the other end of the dramatic scale, in this season of Scott & Bailey.

The series that probably had me most glued to the set this year was Channel Four's conspiracy thriller Utopia, which was chillingly good. Thankfully there will be a second series, unlike The Fades, which deserved far more from BBC Three. You need a bit of weirdness in your life and this was it for me (even more so than the French not-quite-zombies series The Returned.

On the comedy front, we've probably had more laughs this year out of Jack Whitehall than anyone else, thanks to Bad Education, Fresh Meat and Back Chat, plus turns on Have I Got News For You and elsewhere.

However, our favourite show was probably Badults because there's nothing like it around at the moment. Thankfully there will be a second series (BBC Three making up for The Fades!). I'll discuss Badults later in the week.

There are shows that I want to see but haven't yet: Breaking Bad (I've just picked up season one), Game of Thrones, Boardwalk Empire, House of Cards, Arrow (Green Arrow being one of my favourite comics some years back), Veep, 30 Rock and Louis.

That's a lot of catching up to do. I'm beginning to think that I'm not going to be getting much work done in 2014...

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Merry Christmas

Merry Christmas, everyone. 
I hope you all have a fantastic 2014.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Comic Cuts - 20 December 2013

As this is the last Comic Cuts column before Christmas I'd like to take this opportunity to wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year . . . although I should be back next Friday if I'm not still hung-over after Boxing Day.

I'm still working on the next couple of Bear Alley book releases and we should see The Man Who Searched For Fear out next month; I'm hoping that I can hustle the Countdown/TV Action index into shape next month for publication in February, but I'm not promising anything at this stage. I'm still roughing out the introduction but it has been a slow process. The Bill Lacey collection, on the other hand, has been coming along nicely and I'll post a couple of pages at the end of the column.

This is the second week in a row I've used the word "slow". In part it's the run-up to Christmas, which always involves sorting out a ton of things that aren't normally a problem. I will have family staying over for a few days, for instance, so there's beds and blankets and bacon to sort out . . . my sister loves bacon butties and would probably sacrifice the bed if it came down to a choice between those three. Her dog needs the blankets.

There's a sense of happy chaos in the house at the moment. Mel and I put up our tiny tree on Monday and smothered it with decorations; and this year's tree-topper is a talking Dalek. I'll do my best to get a photo over the next couple of days.

Each year I try to produce a top-sellers' listing for British annuals, although tracking down authentic sales figures is becoming trickier every time. At the moment I've only managed to produce a Top Three, the figures dating from the week-ending 30 November 2013:

One Direction The Official Annual 2014 (HarperCollins, 144,600)
Minecraft Annual 2014 (Egmont, 122,635)
Beano Annual 2014 (DC Thomson, 88,360)

Last year's Beano figure was much higher at around this time of year, the Top Three for 15 December 2012 looking like this:

One Direction The Official Annual 2013 (HarperCollins, 158,791)
Beano Annual 2013 (DC Thomson, 146,897)
Moshi Monsters Official Annual (Sunbird, 139,047)

The other chart I produced last year was of the best-selling Bear Alley Books, which I will compile and post at the end of the year. I'm pretty sure I know what will be topping that particular chart, unless something weird happens in the next week.

Working alone at home, there are quite a few things that hold body and soul together. For me, one of the most important things is music. I have always listened to music, radio and, nowadays, podcasts while I work. So I'm thinking that I ought to plug some of the people who have kept me going. I'm not going to do that now, but I'll have a think over the next few days and post a few odds and ends between Christmas and New Year.

But here's one. This is a promo for a DVD that has just come out – I don't have a copy yet but it's on my wish list as my first treat of 2014. I love Frost* (the asterisk is important). They have produced two superlative albums (Milliontown, Experiments in Mass Appeal) and a third is in the works. To tide fans over they've just released The Rockfield Files, with eight live tracks (two acoustic) and an interview.

If you're new to Frost*, the first track below is "Black Light Machine" from their first album. The second video is the trailer for the DVD. 





I've lined up a little Christmas comic strip for the next few days, which I hope you enjoy. Here's wishing you all a Merry Christmas . . . I hope you have a good one. Here's a taster of Agent of the Queen for you. Something to look forward to in 2014.

(* Agent of the Queen © Look and Learn Ltd.)

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Commando 4663-4666

Commando issues on sale 19th December 2013.

Commando No 4663 – The Eagles Return

It’s true that after 1066, no foreign power has successfully invaded Britain. Before that, though, things were different, as waves of foreign invaders rolled in over the seas.
   The Romans were amongst the first to arrive, but when their Legions began to withdraw other warlike clans were quick to fill the power vacuum they left. Clans like the Saxons warriors who surged westwards in search of fresh conquests. It seemed the Eagles who did battle with the Romans would have to unsheathe their weapons afresh.

Story: Ferg Handley
Art: John Ridgway
Cover: John Ridgway

Commando No 4664 – Hounds Of War

Gruttenstein castle — a name that sent shivers down men’s spines. Every field and valley around it was sown with mines and booby-traps. Guarding the castle were the most cold-blooded killer-troops that Germany could produce. Hidden inside it was the terrible “vengeance weapon” soon to be unleashed on its helpless victims…
   …And up there in the secret control room, waiting, gloating, was the fiend who called himself “The Wolf of Gruttenstein”.

Introduction

   There have been a fair few Commando stories over the years with animals as vital parts of the plot; almost characters if you like. This was probably the first but it feels strangely contemporary as the dog’s nose is being used to sniff out explosives as they do today. As usual, the inventive Major Hebden weaves a lovely tale and draws a complex villain with a dual personality. No cardboard cut-outs here.
   Ken Barr’s slavering hounds set the scene and Boluda follows his lead with his strong black-and-whites. No ruff-ness there!
   That’s enough of my barking, get reading!

Calum Laird, Commando Editor

Story: Eric Hebden
Art: Boluda
Cover: Ken Barr
Originally Commando No 67 (May 1963)

Commando No 4665 – Battle Of The Beams

During World War II, the battle for supremacy between the scientists of Britain and Germany was as furious as any at sea, on the ground or in the air.
   When German advances in aircraft guidance gave their bombing raids brutal accuracy, young RAF Pilot Officer Clem Peterson and government scientist, “Doc” Smith, were just two of the men facing the task of neutralising the new system before enemy warplanes could bomb Britain to its knees. With their hands full, the last thing they needed was an inflexible Air Marshal unwilling to accept the need for progress…but that’s what they got.

Story: Alan Hebden
Art: Carlos Pino (incorrectly credited as Manuel Benet)
Cover: Carlos Pino (incorrectly credited as Manuel Benet)
http://www.commandocomics.com/latest-issues/19th-december-2013-collection?issue=4665

Commando No 4666 – The Final Target

A Nazi through and through, Hans Kruger was one of an elite squad of raiders led by his brother, Fritz. Infiltration and sabotage were their specialties, and they were prepared to fight to the last bullet, to die rather than fail to succeed.
   They had to be stopped — somehow!

Introduction

This tough tale —with an unrelenting, murderously ruthless Nazi unit at its core— seems almost like a throwback to Commando’s gritty origins in the early 1960s. Thankfully, though, it’s not all darkness — as we discover that there can be some honour and goodness on the battlefield and, on occasion, it can come from an unexpected source…
   So, kudos must go to the freelance contributors above, as well as the 1988 Commando editorial team, for creating this memorable book.

Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor

Story: Cyril Walker
Art: Blasco
Cover: Jeff Bevan
Originally Commando No 2190 (June 1988), re-issued as No 3644 (August 2003)

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