Showing posts with label robert loren fleming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robert loren fleming. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

BONUS BOOK - Flash Force 2000 (1984)


BONUS BOOK - Flash Force 2000 (November, 1984)
"Driving Force"
Writer - Robert Loren Fleming
Pencils - Denys Cowan
Inks - Sal Trapani
Colors - Joe Orlando
Letters - Gaspar
Editor - Andy Helfer

Happy New Year, Everybody!

For my American readers... are ya tired of seein' H&R Block commercials yet?  Lord knows I am.  I hope you all had wonderful Holiday Season, full'a family, friends, and food.  But now, as the song says, it's time for us all to "muddle through" (somehow).

That said, today we're looking at a Matchbox car tie-in called Flash Force 2000 (if only it were called Flash Force 2020, am I right?).  It took me a minute to recall what this one was all about... for a second, I actually thought it was a Barry Allen Flash-related thing.  It ain't though!  It's something else altogether... for better or worse.

I'm reading this in an issue of Tales of the Teen Titans (since I already had that longbox open anyway), and was reminded that this was an issue of that series I'd wanted to cover on the blog for quite some time.  It's a story that features a team called the RECOMbatants, who are analogous to the DNAgents from Eclipse Comics... which led to an unofficial crossover between the two books.  The DNAgents title would follow suit by introducing their own version of the New Teen Titans, called... of all things, "Project: Youngblood"!  (DNAgents #14 - July, 1984)

Pretty wild, right?  Well, the only reason I didn't go through with covering the the unofficial crossover, was... this Insert Preview!  I felt as though it would "muddy the waters" so to speak, and being a completionist, I'd have felt weird leaving it out.  Welp, after today's post, that won't be a problem anymore.  Hopefully, before long, I'll cover the New Teen Titans/DNAgents crossover event here!

This Insert Preview appeared in the following issues (all cover-dated November, 1984)
  • Batman and the Outsiders #15
  • Blue Devil #6
  • Superman #401
  • Tales of the Legion of Super-Heroes #317
  • Tales of the Teen Titans #48
  • World's Finest Comics #309
Worth noting, I did try and search YouTube for any Flash Force 2000 commercials... and came up empty!  I did, however, learn that there's a toy line called "Flush Force"... which, along with society's apparent obsession with a Poop-shaped Emoji, really makes me question just about everything about the direction we're headed!

Oh well, those are problems for another day... let's see what this story is all about!

--


We open with a quick-n-dirty look at what will be going on, presumably in the year 2000.  Remember... the future was such a long time ago.  Turns out there was a disaster... that both changed and reshaped the world, which is something the narrator will not allow us to forget.  Civilization has been whittled down to one major hub city... called Technopolis.  From it spurs a road, the Transway, which connects it to other, smaller communities.  And so, they built cars so they can travel.  There are good guys, and there are bad guys... naturally.  The bad guys are the "Mutant Scavengers" called the Dark Seekers.  As we join the story, the Seekers are raising a bit of hell on a trio of travelers.  After beating up/killing the humans, they look to salvaging their autos.  They do so under the orders of the EEEVIL Terminus-3!


We shift scenes back to Technopolis, where this event is being played out on the monitor of a genius inventor named Dr. Malcolm Ryder.  He laments the loss of the convoy, and blames himself for not showing them how to properly operate these new post-disaster cars.  He presents his "latest development" to his son, Flash and... I'm going to assume, Flash's girlfriend Shari.  It's a V.M.C.: a Vehicular Memory Chip, which is to say, something that can be implanted... either in a human, or a vehicle... it's not quite clear.


Now, this entire scene... well, the audio of it anyway... is being played out in Terminus-3's base.  Wait, I thought he was just salvaging scrap with the Mutants?  Oh well, whatever the case... ol' Termy is tickled almost as pink as his base by the news.


Back to Technopolis... Flash's twin brother Damon finally wakes up, and joins his father, brother, and would-be girlfriend.  Ya see, it would appear both of Mal's kids wanna git with Shari.  This is a rather jumbled, and highly dramatic scene.  Damon asks Shari out... she turns him down.  Flash shoves Damon, who bops into Malcolm, causing him to drop the V.M.C.  Malcolm tells Damon to be more careful, which prompts an epic teen-age rant... ending with Damon insisting he never asked to be born, nobody will ever understand him, and that he's running away.  He actually leaves the safety of Technopolis and heads into the wastelands.  Good Lord, we're only on page four.


Damon makes it about five steps out of the city before being descended upon by Dark Seeker Mutants.  Rather than fight back, he just begs them not to hurt him.  Whatta guy!


As luck would have it, Terminus-3 just happened to be wandering by... and he calls off the Mutant attackers.  After lying to Damon about wanting to make peace with Dr. Ryder, he and Malcolm's dumber son become fast friends.  Thinking that facilitating peace talks will make him an instant hero, Damon even offers to help Termy enter Technopolis using his security clearance!


Back inside, Damon waits for Flash and Shari to head off on their date before presenting his father with, perhaps, his new research partner... Terminus-3!  This is obviously a trap... and Termy threatens to kill Damon, unless Dr. Ryder, get this, "programs his driveless cars... for EVIL!!!".  What's that thing where the best villains always think they're working for "good"?  Well, not here.


Dr. Ryder throws his hands in the air, and agrees to program the cars... for EVIL.  Terminus-3 insists he wastes no time... the EVIL transition will begin right now!


As the process begins, Terminus-3 is giddy as a schoolboy... literally jumping up and down chanting "Eeeeevil!  Eeeeevil!" as though he's friggin' Simon and Hecubus on Kids in the Hall.


See?  His celebratory "EVILing" is so loud, it manages to stir up ol' Flash Ryder, who's going to check out what all the hub-bub's about.


Down in the lab, Terminus-3 forces Damon into one of his EVIL "Rampager" cars... which, begins to operate on its own.  So, I guess those V.M.C.'s are for the cars then?  Anyhoo, the car takes it upon itself to... get this... kill Dr. Malcolm Ryder!  Like just atomize the poor sumbitch!  Like how the Sentinel does Wolverine during Days of Future Past!  Of course, Flash arrives on the scene just in time to see this go down... and, in the driver's seat of the killer car... his twin brother.  Uh-oh!  Further "uh-oh"... we're only on page friggin' eight.


Damon and the Rampagers take off, and Shari enters the scene.  Dr. Ryder shares a few final words with his favorite son about a "secret weapon" he'd prepared before perishing.  Flash heads into the next room where he's greeted by a trio of programmed non-EVIL cars... Maz(da), Scout, and 'Vette.  These cars tell Flash of yet another top-secret project the Doc had been working on, and sends the sobbing son through the third corridor in order to find it.


Shari heads up to the Technopolis gunnery and proceeds to fire into the swarm of Rampagers that are headed their way.  Meanwhile, the "Hot Rods" Maz, Scout, and 'Vette launch into some bumper-car action!  We get three or so pages of cars crashing into one another... with plenty of comments about their "explosive bumpers" which just so happen to be the main (and perhaps, only) "feature" of the Flash Force 2000 Matchbox toys.


The Hot Rods make quite a dent in Terminus-3's car-army (carmy?), until the Mutant baddies launch the (dun, dun, dunnnnn) Battle Van!  The Battle Van is, well, exactly what it sounds like... and it's tremendously huge.  Not sure why Termy and Co. don't just try and sell these things rather than doing... whatever the hell they're trying to do here.


Before the Battle Van can do any damage, we learn what Flash's final gift from his father was... Dr. Ryder's Tornado Chopper!  Terminus takes one look at the whirlybird before calling off the attack!  Seriously... that's all it takes!


Terminus flees from the van, and heads over to pluck his hostage Damon Ryder from his EVILmobile.  Damon isn't cool with any of this, but doesn't seem to have any choice in the matter.  In the air, Flash has a clean shot at the Big Bad... but chooses not to fire, as he cannot bring himself to harm his twin brother.


We (finally) wrap up with Flash taking all of his late father's responsibilities in Technopolis... and a twenty-one gun salute in honor of Dr. Malcolm Ryder.


--

Holy Cow, you guys... is it still 2020, or did we miss it?  Damn this was endless.  Funny, out of this entire BONUS BOOK project, I bet this piece will wind up being the least read... but it took the longest time to do!

As a kid who, despite owning dozens of Matchbox/Hot Wheels cars, never cared one bit about 'em... I'll give the creative team a bit of credit in trying to assign a measure of personality and purpose to the Flash Force.  The backstory is a bit... I dunno... precious, but it works in a pinch.

I still don't have much of an investment in the cars... I mean, I couldn't even get into Transformers... because, what are the stakes there?  A robot is destroyed... you rebuild the damn robot.  Sure, it's a hiccup, but when the dust settles, the robot (or in this case, car) will be back, often better than before.  I suppose where this story... err, shines (?) is in the human bits.  Our twins are basically a post-apocalyptic Goofus and Gallant...


... which, I suppose is as good a trope as any.  I haven't ever come across any of the mini-comics that followed this Insert Preview (each toy came with an issue), so I don't know if they ever reconcile.  If I were to make a guess... I'd assume that they planned to reunite them, but the toy line got cancelled before they could.  Either that, or they were saving it for an animated series.  Who knows?  Not me.

Overall... this sure was something we read today.  The art was good... and, it seems as though Fleming tried his best to make something interesting of this.  Sadly it falls a bit short of that Hot Wheels series we looked at back in the long ago.  They can't all be winners!

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Monday, January 15, 2018

Action Comics #563 (1985)


Action Comics #563 (January, 1985)
"Black Beauty"
"Mr. Mxyzptlk, Media Star!"
"Jimmy Olsen--Blob!"
Writers - Keith Giffen, Robert Loren Fleming, E. Nelson Bridwell & Craig Boldman
Pencillers - Keith Giffen, Alex Saviuk & Howard Bender
Inkers - Bob Oksner, Dennis Jensen & Pablo Marcos
Colorist - Anthony Tollin
Letterers - John Costanza, Ben Oda & Milt Snapinn
Editor - Julius Schwartz
Cover Price: $0.75

Well, yesterday I announced my intent to cover one-hundred issues of Action Comics before the release of Action Comics #1000 (on April 18, 2018)... and, folks seem to be pretty keen on the idea!


Lemme tell ya, that was a relief.  I was halfway expecting a "Oh boy, this idiot's going to be talking about Superman until Spring...", but the response I received was all positive... even got some suggestions for issues to cover... one of which, we'll be chatting up today.

This suggestion comes from R.T. David... and it's a doozy!  Three wild pre-Crisis stories (that sorta evoke the Silver-Age) in an issue I just recently found.  I nabbed this during one of my first post-move bin-dives... which is likely why I forgot all about it.  I mean, just take a look at that cover... that's not an issue you're likely to forget you've got in your collection!

Sooo... let's get down to it.  Big thanks to R.T. and everyone who offered suggestions, I already have them pulled and ready to run!  Tomorrow we'll be covering a very special Guy Gardner issue.

To everyone, thanks for joining me on this Action-packed journey... and remember, if there are any issues you want me to ruin cover, just lemme know!  If you want to see if I already covered it, just click the handy Action Comics 100 icon to the right ->

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Our first story opens with our old friend Ambush Bug trying to repair a little "baby bug".  He's got the TV news on in the background... which includes, the tragic news that Chuckles the Clown has passed away!  Didn't even know he was sick!  Anyhoo, A. Bug keeps fiddling away at the baby bug... but winds up triggering some electrical discharge, blowing the poor thing to bits!  He then finds that he's changed color... first to pink... then to black?!



Black?  How can that be... he was nowhere near the Secret Wars!  I love that this gag was included.  Gotta tell ya, the hardest part about covering an Ambush Bug story is the fact that I want to include every gag!



Not wanting to face the world in his new duds, our man pops into a costume shop... and buys a cartoon horse outfit!  Well, I guess in some places that might be less conspicuous than a black Ambush Bug costu-- oh, f'rget it!



Across town, a man is trying to steal a television set from an apartment.  Well, since this is Metropolis, you gotta figure Superman's on the case.  The would-be robber is not terribly pleased to see the Man of Steel... and fakes motion sickness to avoid being flown away.  That is, until the "Rogue Horse" pops into the scene!  So freaked out was the robber, he hops into Superman's arms... and is totally cool with turning himself in.  At this point, Superman and Ambush Bug have themselves a little chat.



What we're about to cover is the secret origin of the Bug.  Ya see, there was once a man named Brum-El who lived on the planet Schwab.  One day he broke a chain letter (the same one Jor-El of Krypton broke, actually)... and the planet was doomed!  And so, Brum-El built a rocket... and decided to save his... clothes.  Also on board the ship was... a giant radioactive spider!



The ship crashed atop a building in Metropolis... where in one of the apartments our man Irwin dwelt.  He broke himself away from the television to check on the ruckus... and discovered a suit.  Since he never had a suit (but always wanted one) he decided to... er, adopt it.



Back on Schwab... the countdown to destruction is on.  Turns out the chain letter's warning didn't really pan out.  Brum-El sacrificed his entire wardrobe... for nothing!



Superman ain't impressed and flies away commenting how dumb Ambush Bug's origin story was... before, well... you know, putting two and two together.



Our second story stars ol' Mxy... who really wants to be a star!  During a meeting at the Galaxy Building, Clark Kent overhears the arrival of the thorn in his side... and engages in some old-fashioned super-ventriloquism in order to distract and "supe up".



Superman heads into Morgan Edge's office to find that Mxy's turned the place upside down.  Before Superman can act, Mxyzptlk zips out.  Our man wishes they'd instead been visited by Mr. Kltpzyxm... Mxy's Bizarro double who only does good deeds!  This'll be important later.



Clark brainstorms a way to get Mxy to bug back to the Fifth Dimension... and decides to offer him a talent contract from Galaxy Communications... with his name written backwards on it!  Well... it turns out that Mxy ixnayed the ackwardsbay itingwray.  No matter how many times Clark tries... he can't write the Imp's name backwards.  He checks with Lois... who is also incapable of writing anything backwards!



We shift scenes to later that evening where Lois and Clark attend the premiere of Galaxy's latest blockbuster.  Turns out this most definitely isn't the "director's cut" of the film... as Mxy now has a co-starring role!



Superman attempts to interject... but winds up just flying through the screen.  Whoops.  Elsewhere, Morgan Edge is about to... er, get down with his bad self with some good old-fashioned pornography.  Boy is he in for a surprise when the centerfold is... well, you know... Mr. Mxyzptlk.



Turns out Mxy's really serious about being a pop-culture phenomenon.  Good thing there was no such thing as online social media back in 1985!  Anyhoo, we shift into a montage... and can see that the Imp has caused all sorts of mischief inserting himself into all kinds of events.



Finally, Clark has a plan!  Superman and Morgan Edge approach Mxy with... a contract... a legit one.  They also have him read over the poster they produced for his brand-new show.  A poster which claims that Mxyptlk is greater than his Bizarro double, Kltpzyxm.  Pop!



Our third and final story concerns Superman's Pal.  We open with Superman hauling away a glass globe... inside which, is a freckly blob.  I wonder who that might be?  Well, I suppose that's a silly question considering the title of the story, eh?



Now the question remains... how did Jimmy Olsen turn into a blob?  Well, it turns out earlier that day he went to the museum to retrieve many of his adventure artifacts.  Things like his Elastic Lad serum... and a, er... "glowing paperweight" from the planet Ravager.  Hopefully not that Ravager.  Anyhoo, he bores Lois with his trinkets during an elevator ride.



Once outside, Jimmy notices a little girl falling from an apartment window.  Acting fast, he takes a swig of Elastic-serum... only, it transforms him into... well, a blob.  He is still able to save the child by breaking her fall.



Passers by, however, think the blob was trying to attack the girl... and proceed to pelt him with garbage.  So far it's just a regular day in the life of James Olsen, right?



It isn't long before a full-on mob assembles around our boy... including Lois Lane, who... seeing Jimmy's clothes strewn about believes that the blob must've eaten him!  Well, stands to reason...



Jimblob manages to escape the unruly masses by slipping into the... alligator-infested Metropolis sewers.  I mean, what?  Are we supposed to believe that the sewer-system of Metropolis is teeming with 'gators?  Underworlders, sure... but alligators?  C'mon.  Anyhoo, Jimmy is able to escape again... and actually makes himself useful by scaring some battery thieves.



After that, Jimmy... get this... decides to pick up his date for the evening... as a boy blob.  Really.  Suffice it to say, she's not too keen on this idea.



Dejected and rejected, Jimblob returns to the streets... where he finds himself surrounded by police officers... with their guns drawn.  Luckily, Superman finally wanders by... and loads the blob into the bubble from the open.



He brings him to a far-off planet... and it begins to downpour.  Before he (or we) knows it, he's changed from annoyingly ugly blob back to a annoyingly ugly boy.  Superman reveals that while Jimmy's artifacts were in the museum... the Ravager paperweight must have let off some radiation... which somehow fouled the Elastic-Serum (and probably everyone who went to visit the exhibit!).



We wrap up with Superman (and Pal) returning home.



--

Now this... was a blast!

It's so weird... if an issue like this were to come out today, it would be looked at as something of a "throwaway".  Probably because we don't get too many "done in one's" these days... if this were to come out, it would likely be cutting into an ongoing story.  I think back to that odd issue of Action Comics (vol.2) that was all Bizarro from a few years back (2015?)... that felt so out of place, and not in a good way.

With all that said... this was great!  I think we started off hot with the Ambush Bug story... and went down from there.  So, let's start our discussion by chatting up the weakest (in my opinion) of the three stories... the Jimmy Olsen one.

Maybe it's just my knee-jerk bias to Jimmy Olsen... but I definitely had the least amount of fun following his blobby adventure.  He just comes across as so annoying.  I mean, even as a blob... he still manages to have a "punchable" face!

I feel like this was the most Silver-Agey of the three stories presented... so it's hard to actually get mad at it.  I'll just say that it wasn't as fun as the other two, and move on.

The Mxy story, however, was a bit more fun.  The other day we talked about how writers would have to be a bit creative in how they used the Yellow Peri's powers.  They'd need to come up with a sort of "monkey's paw" result to her magic spells to make her something of an unwitting foil.  That sort of creativity needs to be present when coming up with ways to get Mxy to say his name backwards.  We've covered him before on the humble blog... and it never ceases to surprise me when a writer is able to "pull it off" in a fun way.

Here, we get a mention of Mxy's Bizarro double... which presents Superman with a loophole in which he can write the Imp's name backwards... without actually writing a backwards word!  Pretty sneaky, Supes.

The definitely highlight (at least for me) would have to be the Ambush Bug opener.  So whacked out... and so much fun.  This story pulls no punches, and doesn't pretend to take itself too seriously.

From Ambush Bug talking "jive"... to an E.D. joke... to a Secret Wars mention... and a gag at Superman's origin's expense... this was a story you have to see to truly appreciate.  Honestly, the opening story was so much fun, it could've been followed up by sixteen blank pages... and I'd still recommend you track down this issue!

It doesn't look like this issue is available digitally... however, if you're down for just the Ambush Bug story (and don't mind black and white art), the opener is included in SHOWCASE Presents: Ambush Bug (which looks to be, unfortunately out of print... but shouldn't be too terribly hard to track down).  It might just be easier to track down this issue... any way you do it, I'd recommend that you do... it!

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Letters Page (featuring The Mad Maple!) in which they discuss Action Comics #559:


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