Thursday, February 23, 2017

Killraven War of the Worlds

Amazing Adventures #18



"The War of the Worlds!"
series conceived and edited by: Roy Thomas
inspired by the novel by H.G. Wells
script: Gerry Conway
art: Neal Adams & Howard Chaykin
inks: F. Chiaramonte
letters: John Costanza
colors: P Goldberg

grade: B-


For what it's worth, the credits for this issue are not entirely truthful. Thomas makes clear in his write-up late in the issue that, while he conceived the premise for this series, Adams was responsible for Killraven himself. He also explains the series of missed deadlines and conflicted obligations that resulted in this particular issue receiving three plotters and two pencilers. Unfortunately, the title won't receive any creator stability until the fourth issue. Fortunately, that team will include writer Don McGregor, the writer who sticks through to the end of the series and is almost universally credited for making this series the classic that it's now remembered as.

The premise is surprisingly faithful to the real War of the Worlds, with the added difference that the martian invaders learned how to adapt to bacteria and returned with a second invasion a hundred years after their first failed attack. The present day of this story takes place nearly two decades after the second (successful) invasion. 

I find the story's handling of the martians quite interesting. On the one hand, Thomas, Adams, and Conway work to preserve the intimidating mystery surrounding the alien invaders by refraining from showing what they actually look like (at least in these first issues), and yet their motives are presented clear as day and are relatively disappointing. Somehow, the idea of them using humans for gladiator combat in order to amuse themselves takes away so much of their mystique, making them no different than history's human invaders; not alien or superior in any way beyond their technological abilities. I found this a bit disappointing. Don McGregor will later change their primary motive to being the eating of humans, which at least is something a bit more alien.

Regarding Killraven, our leather clad hero (good to know they still have s&m apparel in post-apocalyptic 2018! Thankfully, the costume gets changed in only a few short issues), we learn a great deal about him and his origins in this issue, though it's all delivered in a thoroughly unsubtle obligatory explanation/flashback as Doctor Raker uses his last breaths to deliver 10 pages of back story, only to have Killraven tell him he already knew all this and then tack on five more pages of his own recollections that Doctor Raker similarly already knows. Here's what we learn from all of this obligatory dumping of information:

- Real name: Jonathan Raven
- Doctor Raker (controlled by the martians) "chose" Killraven at a young age (referring to some special power he possesses), and killed his mother and (allegedly) his baby brother in order to take Killraven into his care.
- Implied that Doctor Raker might be Killraven's father(?). 
- Killraven fought as a gladiator until he was able to escape, become the leader of Staten Island, become the number one enemy of the mayor of Manhattan, and earn a reputation and a band of comrades.
- Kills Doctor Raker out of revenge. 
And then the comic slides into how not wage  a war against the alien invaders.See Colony,Dark Skies,Independence Day for that.And fuck comics first interracial kiss.

Killraven

Killraven
Amazing Adventures 30 (1970).jpg
Amazing Adventures vol. 2, #30 (May, 1975)
Left to right: M'Shulla, Killraven, Mint Julep
Cover art by P. Craig Russell.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceAmazing Adventures vol. 2, #18 (May 1973)
Created byRoy Thomas
Neal Adams
Gerry Conway
In-story information
Alter egoJonathan Raven
Team affiliationsFreemen
Notable aliasesK.R.
AbilitiesAbility to project consciousness
Killraven (Jonathan Raven) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character has been depicted as a freedom fighter in several post-apocalyptic alternate futures. Created by co-plotters Roy Thomas and Neal Adams, scriptwriterGerry Conway, and penciller Adams, the character first appeared inAmazing Adventures vol. 2, #18 (May 1973). The series featured the first dramatic interracial kiss in American color comic books.

Contents

Publishing historyEdit

Co-creator Neal Adams' early ideas for Killraven involved the character being the son of a Doc Savage archetype.[1] This conception had been reworked by the first issue, a multiple-creator goulash in which the two originators and co-plotters turned the scripting over to another writer, and in which artist co-creator Adams penciled only the first 11 pages andHoward Chaykin the remaining nine. The second issue was fully written by the debut's scripter, Gerry Conway, followed in the third by Marv Wolfman.
After this, the book became the province of writer Don McGregor for an acclaimed run[2] from #21 (Nov. 1973) to the final issue, #39 (Nov. 1976). Pencillers were Herb TrimpeRich BucklerGene Colan, and, most prominently, P. Craig Russellfrom issue #27 on.
Two of its characters, Carmilla Frost and the African American M'Shulla Scott, shared color comic books' earliest known dramatic interracial kiss,[3] in issue #31 (July 1975), page nine, final panel.[4]
Aside from McGregor, with whom the character became associated, other writers include Bill Mantlo (a fill-in Amazing Adventures and a Marvel Team-Up with Killraven and a future-flung Spider-Man); Joe Linsner (a 2001 Marvel Knights one-shotKillraven, set in 2020 New York City, at odds with the original series' locale by that fictional year); and Alan Davis (also artist), in a 2002 parallel universe miniseries, Killraven vol. 2. An Essential Marvel volume in 2005 reprinted all the character's appearances except that Davis story.
McGregor and Russell, however, remain the series' signature creative team; more than two decades after the original series' end, comics historian Peter Sanderson wrote that,
It was writer Don McGregor who transformed the Killraven saga ... into a classic. Of all of Marvel's writers, McGregor has the most romantic view of heroism. Killraven and his warrior band were also a community of friends and lovers motivated by a poetic vision of freedom and of humanity's potential greatness. McGregor's finest artistic collaborator on the series was P. Craig Russell, whose sensitive, elaborate artwork, evocative of Art Nouveau illustration, gave the landscape of Killraven's America a nostalgic, pastoral feel, and the Martian architecture the look of futuristic castles.[5]
Some planned elements of the "Killraven" saga were incorporated into the Eclipse Comics series Sabre, McGregor[6] and Russell[7] each said in 1983.
The character made latter-day appearances in Marvel Zombies 5 #2 (April 2010) where the war against the Martians is concluded, and in The Avengers vol. 4, #4-6 (Aug.-Oct. 2010), the latter in the present day after time-traveling. Killraven appears in Claws II (Aug. 2011), in which the superheroes Wolverine and Black Cat meet him in the future fighting Martians.

Unrealized projectsEdit

In the late 1980s, Don McGregor wrote 50 to 60 pages and P. Craig Russell began illustrating a final story, "Killraven: Final Battles, Final Lies, Final Truths" (also referred to as "Final Lies, Final Truths, Final Battles"). The story never saw print, according to McGregor, because Marvel would not assure Russell the company would print the story in Marvel's best format at the time. In this intended finale to McGregor's story, "Killraven would take that war back to the intruders" on Mars itself.[8]
In the mid-1990s, Grant Morrison and Mark Millar considered tying in Marvel's 2099 imprint, making Ravage a descendant of Killraven. "Our idea was that the Killraven stories had actually happened, but Earth somehow got itself back together. It's now one hundred years later, and the Martians are attacking again, meaning that all the superheroes were going to have to deal with them." Galactus then arrives, and devours Mars along with the Martians.[9]
In 2005, writer Jim Valentino said his aborted plans for the Marvel comic Guardians of the Galaxy involved Killraven, in his 50s, joining the team and forming an attraction to Yellowjacket (Rita DeMara). Valentino said he would have establishedFranklin Richards as Killraven's father.[10]
Writer Robert Kirkman and artist Rob Liefeld announced in August 2007 they were creating a five-issue, alternate universeKillraven miniseries planned for release in 2008, but the project never went into production.[11][12]

Fictional character biographyEdit

On the alternate-future Earth designated Earth-691 by Marvel Comics,[13] the Martians from H. G. WellsThe War of the Worlds return in 2001 for another attempt at conquering the planet (They were later retconned as extrasolar aliens usingMars as a staging area.[14]). After humanity's enslavement, men not used as breeders or collaborators are trained and forced to battle gladiator-style for the Martians' amusement; women are used as breeders to supply infants, eaten by the Martians as a delicacy. Jonathan Raven, dubbed Killraven as his gladiatorial nom de guerre, escaped with the help of the gladiatorial "keeper", but without his brother, Deathraven. Killraven joined the Freemen, a group of freedom fighters against Martian oppression.[15]
From 2018 to 2020, Killraven and his companions travel across the eastern portion of North America, from New York Cityto Cape Canaveral while searching for Killraven's lost brother.[volume & issue needed] Pursued by the cyborg Skar, the Freemen encounter various victims of Martian transhuman experiments, as well as emotionally and psychologically scarred survivors.[volume & issue needed]
Fugitives from the Martians, Killraven and his Freemen — his African American "mud-brother" M'Shulla Scott, the cynical and bitter Native American Hawk, and the slow-witted strongman Old Skull — meet and incorporate into their group the feisty scientist Carmilla Frost and Grok, the deformed, apelike clone of her father.[16] The Freemen ally with the human/plant hybrid Mint Julep, and battle Abraxas, Rattack, the High Overlord, and Skar.[17] Killraven tames a mutated serpent-horse to use as his mount, and his Freemen battle Pstun-Rage in Battle Creek, Michigan. (In this encounter, the antagonists' names are anagrams of the Battle Creek-based Kellogg Company's breakfast cereals).[18] The Freemen meet the flirty and sensual Volcana Ash, who helps them battle Atalon and the Death-Breeders.[19] After learning that his brother Joshua (Deathraven) is still alive,[20] Killraven fights Martian slaves alongside a time-traveling Spider-Man,[21] The Freeman eventually reach the Everglades, where they encounter the butterfly-like Mourning Prey.[22]
Still later, the Freemen encounter Killraven's brother, Deathraven, and discover he has become a Martian collaborator.[23]
In November 2020, the Martian occupation is over when Killraven unleashes a zombie plague on the Martians' food supply (humans and human infants).[24]

Powers and abilitiesEdit

As a youth, gladiator-in-training Jonathan Raven's physical prowess was heightened thanks to injections of experimental chemicals by Keeper Whitman. He was later given mental powers through Whitman's psycho-electric experiments, including the psionic ability to project his consciousness into and take over a Martian's mind, and the psychic ability to resist mental assaults and to mask his presence from robot scanners.
Killraven is also a superb hand-to-hand combatant, and a highly skilled swordsman, wrestler, and martial artist. He is a master of most hand weaponry, especially shuriken. He is a master strategist in guerrilla warfare. Killraven possesses an encyclopedic knowledge of human history, art, and science predating the Martian invasion of A.D. 2001, implanted in his mind by Keeper Whitman.
As artist P. Craig Russell described, "Killraven has a sort of extrasensory ability to counterbalance his gladiatorial skills. He is very much the barbarian type, yet at the same time he has this seed planted in his brain that is the history of the human race — a racial memory of everything that has been obliterated by the Martians. It's almost a magical ability.... It was what removed him from being just another sword-wielding gladiator type."[25]
Killraven wears bulletproof fabrics and leather. He is armed with various weapons as needed, and usually carried a sword and shuriken. He sometimes rides a mutated serpent-horse, or appropriated Martian vehicles and aircraft.

Other versionsEdit

Killraven vol. 2, #3 (Feb. 2003). Cover art by Alan Davis.
There have been counterparts of Killraven in several stories:

Mainstream Marvel continuityEdit

In the mainstream Marvel Universe that the company dubs Earth-616, Jonathan Raven appears in the 2006-2007 miniseriesWisdom. He is the son of Wisdom's MI-13 co-worker and lover, Maureen Raven, and the target of a trans-dimensional Martian Invasion because, as the Martian leader states, "On all Earths! Always! Every one of him is dangerous! Ruling council plan to invade all other Earths. So I urged this first expedition now before he is grown". Wisdom is forced to kill Maureen in order to stop the Martian invasion, while Jonathan is taken to an MI-6 safehouse in Prague and trained bymartial artist Shang-Chi.[28]

ParodiesEdit

  • In Marvel's Howard the Duck #2 (March 1976), Howard dreams he is "Killmallard", a freedom fighter battling alien overlords who use tripods identical to those of Killraven's Martian opponents.

MovieEdit

Hollywood trade stories in 2005 reported plans to adapt Killraven for a theatrical motion picture, with Marvel and Sony Pictures in negotiations with Robert Schenkkan to write a script.[29][30][31]

Collected editionsEdit

The original Killraven's complete adventures, listed here, were collected in the 2005 trade paperback The EssentialKillraven (ISBN 0-7851-1777-6):
Alan Davis' series have also been collected into hardcover (ISBN 0-7851-2538-8) and softcover (ISBN 0-7851-2841-7) volumes.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ "Neal Adams: The Marvel Years" (interview)Comic Book Artist #3 (Winter 1999). WebCitation archive.
  2. ^ In addition to contemporaneous reviews in the 1970s, latter-day reviews include:
    • "Don McGregor took over the 'Killraven' writing chores, and was joined soon after by P. Craig Russell. With their combined talents, and the freedom that comes with working on a low-selling book that could be canceled at any moment, the two of them produced a groundbreaking series that explored philosophy, madness, love, violence, and the nature of freedom". — Gage, Chris"Killraven 1 (of 6)". (Review) FeoAmante.com. Archived from the original on February 6, 2010.
    • "Though quite a few folks had their hand in the original run back in Amazing Adventures, it was the words-and-pictures team of Don McGregor and P. Craig Russell that made my tentacles twitch. ...a classic". — Sangiacomo, Michael (January 25, 2003). "JiC: Looking Over the January Rack"NewsaramaArchived from the original on February 6, 2010.
    • "As his work progressed, readers saw [P. Craig Russell] take artistic ownership of 'Killraven'. ... Much like Jim Steranko's work on Marvel's Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D, events flowed through some pages in a style that was as reminiscent of fine art as it was of comic art. Also impressive was his sense of design. Russell arguably produced some of the most imaginative, and visually horrific, monsters and villains in Marvel's history. Don McGregor handled the writing for this issue-run, and credit must be given to his involved plots, as well as his ability to pack a lot of story into a 32-page pamphlet". — Allen, Michael (August 17, 2001). "Amazing Adventures". Suspended Animation (column), SciFiDimensions.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2012.
  3. ^ O'English, Mark (2014). "Killraven". In Booker, M. Keith. Comics through Time : A History of Icons, Idols, and Ideas.Greenwood Publishing. p. 666. ISBN 978-0313397509.
  4. ^ One previous interracial kiss occurred not in a color comic book but in Warren Publishing's black-and-white comics magazine Creepy #43 (Jan. 1972), in "The Men Who Called Him Monster", by the same writer, Don McGregor, and artistLuis Garcia. The earliest known humorous interracial kiss was in the story "Home Cooking" in Premier Magazine's satirical comic book Nuts #1 (March 1954), per its listing at the Grand Comics Database.
  5. ^ Sanderson, Peter. Marvel Universe (Harry N. Abrams, 1998) ISBN 0-8109-8171-8ISBN 978-0-8109-8171-3, p. 175
  6. ^ "Don McGregor Says..." (interview), Comics Interview #3 (May 1983), p. 16: "Some of the elements that I had been leading up to in 'Killraven' [when the series was canceled] — especially the material dealing with Yellowstone National Park— I had written about six months previously for Sabre."
  7. ^ P. Craig Russell interview, Comics Interview #3 (May 1983), p. 10: "Don always had a very strong structure worked out several years in advance, but when he didn't think he'd be doing 'Killraven' again, he used some of the ideas and settings in other stories — such as the Disney World setting used in Sabre...."
  8. ^ "A 2005/2006 Interview with Don McGregor!" Arndt, Richard J. (February 3, 2010). "The Warren Magazines: Interviews"Archived from the original on March 13, 2012. Retrieved 22 September 2010. Additional Webcitation archive.
  9. ^ Cronin, Brian. "Grant Morrison and Mark Millar Had a Pitch for a Revamp of Marvel's 2099 Line of Comics", "Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed" (column) #67, Comic Book Resources, n.d. WebCitation archive
  10. ^ Guardians of the Worlds: Archive of Image.com's Jim Valentino annotations, "Jim Valentino's Guardians of the Galaxy Retrospective" (dead link as of at least June 15, 2010)
  11. ^ "Kirkman on 'Killraven'" (archive), WizardUniverse.com (Aug. 10, 2007), by Jim Gibbons and Sean T. Collins. Per Kirkman, "[T]his is really just another Killraven from another universe. The original Killraven is still out there."
  12. ^ Brady, Matt. "WW Chicago - Robert Kirkman Talks Killraven w/ Liefeld"Newsarama, August 10, 2007
  13. ^ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Alternate Universes 2005
  14. ^ Avengers Forever #4
  15. ^ Amazing Adventures vol. 2, #18 (May 1973)
  16. ^ Amazing Adventures #20-21 (Sept. & Nov. 1973)
  17. ^ Amazing Adventures #22-25 (Jan.-July 1974)
  18. ^ Amazing Adventures #26 (Sept. 1974)
  19. ^ Amazing Adventures #27-29 (Nov. 1974 - March 1975)
  20. ^ Amazing Adventures #30 (May 1975)
  21. ^ Marvel Team-Up #45 (May 1976)
  22. ^ Amazing Adventures #39 (Nov. 1976, the final issue)
  23. ^ Killraven, Warrior of the Worlds (Marvel Graphic Novel #7, 1983)
  24. ^ Marvel Zombies 5 #2 (April 2010)
  25. ^ Russell, Comics Interview, pp. 10-11
  26. ^ Avengers Forever #4 (1999)
  27. ^ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A-Z vol. #2 (May 2008)
  28. ^ Wisdom #6
  29. ^ Sci Fi Magazine (Aug. 2005): "Brave New Worlds" (p. 33; side story, "We Are the Worlds")
  30. ^ "Here Comes Killraven", IGN.com, March 21, 2005. WebCitation archive.
  31. ^ "Sony to Bring Old-School Comic 'Killraven' to the Big Screen", Rotten Tomatoes: News, March 21, 2005

External linksEdit




So neither Conway's script nor Chaykin's pencils are anything to write home about, but Thomas' vision of this post-War of the Worlds storyline is compelling, and Adams' art on the first half of the book is positively haunting, especially the frame in which a pilot dying from biological warfare aims his plane directly at a Martian tripod on page 15. 


Minor detail: Check out the Martians' robot drones. Their look, their chief vulnerability (the neck), and the sounds they make while being destroyed feel like blatant rip-offs of Gold Key's Magnus Robot Fighter. Just check out the following line of dialogue delivered by "Mek 12" as Killraven deals a lethal blow to it:

SKREEEEE! Attempted escape in Block 4-D...trainee J. Raven attacking...SKREEEEEE!



All in all, a decent start to the series. Of course, we've got two more issues before we get to the really good stuff.Until everything all went to hell issue by issue.

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