Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Angel Love Special #1 (1987)


Angel Love Special #1 (1987)
"Dark Revelations!"
Creator/Writer/Penciller - Barbara Slate
Inker - John Wm. Lopez
Letterer - Aki Terada
Colorist - Bob Le Rose
Editor - Karen Berger
Cover Price: $1.25

Well, our long trip down Angel Love way has finally come to an end in this extra-sized Special... but that's not the end of Angel Love talk from me.  Nope.  I'll remind y'all again, Reggie and I will be discussing this entire run on this week's Cosmic Treadmill segment on the Weird Science DC Comics Podcast.  That's Episode 88 if you're reading this in the future.

That's right, Angel!

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Picking up where we left off... a balaclava'd Angel is holding Congressional hopeful Maureen McMeal at gunpoint... which doesn't last all that long.  Maureen knows it's Angel, and knows what she's being "held up" with is a water pistol.  She invites Angel to "fire away" as she lights up a smoke... and she does!  Brain-matter and gore are all strewn... er, okay... it's a water gun... Maureen Beth just gets a little wet.


Maureen says she'd be more than happy to help their mother... but not until the election is over.  Ya see, she's stated publicly that her entire family died in a plane crash... she can't be the "honest" candidate and have it come out that she lied about her tragic past.  Turns out, as we dig a bit deeper that her past was already tragic enough.  Her and Angel's father molested her.  That's why she left Scranton!  We learn that she was homeless for awhile after making it to New York... but by the help of a special Social Worker was able to work her way up to where she is today.


Maureen ends the conversation... hops back into bed, and shuts off the light.  Angel's no longer playing around... she goes all "hardball" and threatens to go to the press.  Knowing that the jig is up, Maureen's got no choice but to comply.


Angel signals to Everett, who's waiting outside that everything's cool... and he heads for home.  Along the way, he runs his latest argument with Lola through his head, and figures by now she's gotta be over it.  He hops up the stairs and drops two-bits into Mr. Bum's cup (which wakes the poor fella) on his way up.  He gleefully enters the apartment, and finds...


Meanwhile, Angel and Maureen Beth are using a Port Authority helicopter (ol' MB's got connections, and she ain't afraid to show 'em off).  Maureen calls campaign headquarters and gives the skinny to one of her aides... the actual truth too!  Unfortunately, some skeevy phone-tapper is listening in... this probably won't end well for Ms. McMeal.


Back at the pad, Wendy is singing for her audience of cockroaches and birds... who all scatter when Everett knocks on the door.  Wendy suggests she and Ev talk about what they're going to be when they grow up.  This ticks off and already ticked off Everett who gets all "pointy" and informs Wendy that she is in fact... a grown up.  This may be my soft-spot for Wendy speaking here... but, Everett's layin' it on a bit thick here.  Anyhoo... Wendy takes his lecture as a sign she should give up the movies and theater... and just become a television star!


Meanwhile, Angel and Maureen Beth arrive at their mother's bedside.  MB's thinking she'll be in and out within the hour, as she doubts she'll be a match.  Wrong-O McMeal... you might just be a good candidate for something yet!


Meanwhile again... we rejoin Everett... now in full Michael Jackson "Beat it" get-up.  He's trying to woo Lola back the only way he knows how... buyin' her stuff.  I'd have loved it if Lola told him to "beat it", but no... he knows the way to her heart... gaudy jewelry!


Back in Scranton, Maureen's all done giving marrow... and she's ready to split town.  Doctor Chin advises her against it... but MB's gonna MB.  As she hits the sidewalk, she is met by a massive press gang all wanting to know why she's a lying liar that lied.


We jump ahead one week as Angel and Wendy are talking on the phone.  Angel's chosen to remain in Scranton for the time being while her mother gets back on her feet.  Wendy offers to pay Angel's rent for the month because her rich daddy gave her "a raise" for taking a "pay cut" as a television actress.


Angel flips on the television and we learn that Maureen McMeal... lost the election.  They cut to her concession speech where she plays up her choosing family over politics.  Right after the speech ends... Angel's phone rings.  Why, it's Mary Beth... who just lays into her, and tells her she's going to disappear for awhile.


Seven weeks later, Angel returns to New York City.  She wanders through the familiar streets leading to her apartment... and finds it empty.  Everett's not home either.  Mr. Bum is there... but he's more a Wendy-guy anyway.  A phone call to Pregnant Cindy shows she's not home either.  Could all of Angel's friends have forgotten about her already?  She cries a bit before heading to the Balloon restaurant, where...


And, we close out for good on Angel's reaction.


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Welp... that's that.

Let's discuss this issue before we take an "overall" look at this series... which, was always meant to be this length... it wasn't cancelled.  In so much of my research, I kept seeing it mentioned that this was canned after only eight issues... however, those wacky house-ads that they ran during the Summer of 1986 stated that this was a "special eight issue series".  So, if we look at it that way, it was actually given an extra issue to wrap up.

All's well that ended well here.  Angel's mom survived, at least for the time being... Everett and Lola are still an item... Wendy's rich dad gave her a raise for slummin' it in television... Pregnant Cindy is starting to show... and the Balloon restaurant has apparently lifted it's "no live birds" ban.

I suppose the discussion-worthy thing about this final chapter is the (dark) revelation of why Mary Beth flew the coop, and disowned her family.  I had a sneaking suspicion this was coming... and it's really hard for me to comment on it as a storytelling device.  Looking at this through 2016 eyes... I just see this as a well-worn trope.  Back in 1987, this sort of thing was far more novel... at least as it pertains to comics.  It is interesting to note that this was the only issue of this series to come with a "For Mature Readers" warning.

Poor Maureen/Mary Beth winds up losing the election because she's a lying liar that lies... you'd figure the "saving her mother's life" thing would have carried her through, but what do I know?  I'd have to assume McMeal was running on the Democratic ticket in New York City... so she really must have ticked off her prospective constituents, for them to vote against her.

Angel winds up not quite where she started from.  She's back to being something of a newcomer to the "big city"... but now, when she arrives she has people waiting for her... and celebrating her arrival.  We get a deeper look into Angel and Wendy's relationship... which I was actually pretty curious about.  They appear to be somewhat close... at least to the point where they end their phone calls with "I love you".

I'm kinda scrambling for things to say here.  I gotta admit, I'm kind of unsatisfied with this ending.  It's... I dunno, just another issue... I guess.  The bone-marrow caper is wrapped up, and the election is over... yet, I still feel so little in the way of closure.  As I read through this series, I figured it was going to end with a wedding... or a funeral... or childbirth.  Those would have felt more "endy" than this did.  This just... ends.

Overall... is Angel Love worth your time.  Hell yeah.  I may not have dug the way it all "wrapped up", but I had a great time reading this... and I find that I will miss these characters... some more than others, obviously... but this is really a charming crew, and the whole shebang would have felt incomplete without any single cast member.

I don't know where the rights lay with this property... so I wouldn't even begin to know whose cage to rattle to get this collected... or released digitally (not that my voice is all that loud to begin with).  Not sure if that's a DC Comics thing or a Barbara Slate thing... either way, this series deserves to be readily/easily available for any curious enough to give it a flip through.

Thanks for reading this along with me... this was a fun experience... books like this are kind of the reason I started the humble blog.  Shining what little light I can offer onto some underappreciated gems of yesteryear.  Also, thanks to Ms. Slate for taking us all along for this ride.

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Monday, September 5, 2016

Angel Love #8 (1987)


Angel Love #8 (March, 1987)
"I Know it's you, Mary Beth"
Creator/Writer/Penciller - Barbara Slate
Inker - John Wm. Lopez
Letterer - Bill Yoshida
Colorist - Bob Le Rose
Editor - Karen Berger
Cover Price: $0.75

Okay, here we go... the final issue of Angel Love (until the Special).  Ya know, as a young kid growing up in Brooklyn I was led to believe that everything in the world happened there.  Sesame Street?  Yeah, that didn't look unlike my neighborhood... minus the muppets.  Television shows, movies... everything seemed to happen where I lived.  Here we've got an issue of Angel Love guest-starring New York City Mayor, Ed "How am I doing?" Koch.  Seriously... he's even on the cover.  Growing up, he was kind of a big deal to me, probably because he was the first Mayor I knew about.  He and Mario Cuomo will always be the fellas that ran my old stomping grounds.

Anyhoo... let's see if Angel can squeeze any bone marrow outta her big sis, all under the watchful eye of Mayor Koch.

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Picking up right where we left off, Angel's gotten the ol' heave-ho from McMeal Headquarters by big bad Bernie.  She's totally lost it... she's yelling, crying and waving her arms like a madwoman as Maureen tentatively looks on from inside.  Before Angel can destroy any property, our old friend Everett wanders by and asks what's up.  Angel starts spilling the beans... however, notices that if she sticks around much longer, she's gonna be late for her shift at Balloon.


The pair hops on the subway and heads homeward bound.  While on the train, Angel fills Everett in on the entire story... which causes him raise an eyebrow.  He thinks his red-headed pal may have lost her damned mind... he is sorta-kinda using "kid gloves" here, and attributes her lapse in reality to her desperation.  As you might imagine, Angel doesn't wanna hear it.


When Angel returns home, she finds Wendy "sobbing" on the couch.  Not crying, mind you... actually saying "sob, sob, sob".  Gotta love Wendy!  After some empty remark from Angel, Wendy realizes that her future may not be on stage or in the movies... but on television!  And so, she begins giving her Emmy (that's the one for TV, right?) Award speech with a carton of orange juice.


We head back to McMeal HQ, and get a scene with Maureen/Mary Beth herself.  She's worried what might happen if her "secret" comes out.  After all, her campaign slogan is "She Speaks the Truth", how can she come out as a low-down dirty lying liar!  Her internal monologue is interrupted... not by Angel Love story-advancing device "the ringing phone", but by a knock at the door.  Why, it's... Mayor Ed Koch!  How's he doin'?  They've got a dinner date at this fancy schmancy restaurant where the waitresses wear rollerskates... hmm...


Speaking of a fancy schmancy restaurant where the waitresses wear rollerskates, we shift scenes to Balloon where we join Ms. Angel Love working as a rollerskating waitress!  It's just a normal night for Angel... annoying yuppie customers, yadda yadda yadda, until... the Mayor of New York and an aspiring Councilwoman enter the scene.  Maureen's all "ruh roh" and she and a confused Koch beeline it back to the Mayoral limo.

 

Angel returns to the pad... to find Wendy is still delivering her Emmy acceptance speech.  She sneaks past to her art studio, and finally realizes that Halo is missing her... halo.  She brings her doodle back to life, and spills her guts to it.  Halo is an optimistic angel, and suggests that Mary Beth would eventually come around and give her a buzz... then, the phone rings!  It's not an issue of Angel Love without a ringing phone!


Sadly, it's not Mary Beth... but Doctor Chin.  She has some grave news... and for the first time, she delivers it without a smile on her face.  Turns out that Angel's mother has taken an even further turn for the worse... and they've called for a minister.  Angel is heartbroken... however, she's got an idea!


She calls Everett... who is currently swappin' spit with his militant girlfriend Lola.  She tells him it's an emergency, and she needs him to get a car for her.  Lola tells Ev' that he'd best not even think about leaving for that "bleached out redhead"... and if he does, he shouldn't expect to see her around when he gets back.  Everett leaves anyway!


And so... Everett drives Angel to Maureen McMeal's apartment building... and, get this... Angel puts on a ski mask... climbs up the side of the building... climbs into McMeal's open window... and puts a GUN to Maureen's head!!!


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Well... that certainly escalated!

Yup, we're definitely building up to something... but what?  Is Angel going to mug her sister of her bone marrow?  I mean, really... this is getting nuts.  Angel's been spiraling deeper and deeper into just this whacked out desperation... which, I guess I can kind of understand... but, we're getting kind of cartoony here.

Everett goes from irritating bird-hater and cockroach killer to unwitting accomplice here.  What's more, he may have given up his militant girlfriend Lola in the process.  While I would have much rathered Wendy be behind the wheel, I can certainly understand why Angel would choose Ev' instead.

Angel finally realizes that she left the halo off of Halo, and so we get another scene of all that mess.  When I started reading this series, from just looking at the covers and the DC House Ad, I figured this scribbly cartoon angel would have had a much larger part in all of this.  Here we are in the eighth and final issue of the series, and this is only the second time we're seeing her.

Wendy is sadly used sparingly in this chapter.  She does, however, steal the scene(s) she's in.  It's never really made clear if she and Angel are close... outside of being roommates and all.  Like, are they close friends?  Are they sisterly... or is their relationship all based on convenience?

Speaking of sisterly... man, is ol' Maureen/Mary Beth a jerk.  I'm sure that we're going to learn that she was either abused, neglected, or experienced some sort of childhood trauma during the Angel Love Special, but for now... she's horrendously cold.  Poor Mayor Koch didn't get to eat at the fancy roller-skate restaurant... which may be the worst part of all!

Overall... the heavy scenes are really outweighing the fun ones, which I think I would put in the negative column.  It's still quite good, and it's still got heart... which, to me is the most important element of a story like this.  Although I'm not sure what to expect from the upcoming Special, I'm looking forward to it regardless.  Hopefully we end on a fun note... and not the somber one that I'm almost expecting...

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Sunday, September 4, 2016

Angel Love #7 (1987)


Angel Love #7 (February, 1987)
"the search for Mary Beth, part III"
Creator/Writer/Penciller - Barbara Slate
Inker - John Wm. Lopez
Letterer - Bill Yoshida
Colorist - Bob Le Rose
Editor - Karen Berger

Here we go, the penultimate issue of the Angel Love series proper.  Will our leading lady locate her sister in time to save her mother's life?  Let's find out together.

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We open with Angel making her daily call to her hard-boiled detective buddy Levy... who still hasn't the foggiest idea where Mary Beth may be.  He suggests that Angel pack up her stuff and high-tail it back to Scranton.  Ya see, this city's too tough for dames like her!


As she hangs up my girl Wendy pops in.  She's got an audition... and you'll never guess for who.  C'mon, guess... Nah, you'll never guess it's the most famous famous producer in all of Broad-way, Howar Ruelle.  Why, he's so famous neither Wendy nor I can think of a single thing hes done!  I gotta admit, I don't know enough about Broadway to know whether or not this Ruelle is supposed to be a stand-in for somebody else... or, shoot, if Ruelle himself is a real dude!


Anyhoo, Angel tells Wendy to "break a leg"... and you kinda know where this is going.  Well, okay... she doesn't actually "break her leg" but she does fall down and hurt her leg.


After Wendy "walks it off", Angel sits down in front of the television set with a cup of coffee.  She's lamenting her current state, and fearful that she will not be able to find Mary Beth in time to save their mother... when... all of a sudden, she sees a televised speech from Congressional hopeful, Maureen McMeal.  She instantly recognizes the politician as her sister Mary Beth!


Wendy heads down the stoop... and, well I'll be damned... she runs into our old friend Mr. Bum!  He's completely drunk... and still quite the Wendy-fan.  She decides to treat him (and the neighborhood) with her rendition of The Good Boat Ice Cream Float.  She's better then Temple, she is!


She then hops into a cab, where she helps the poor cabbie "recognize" her... ya know, by telling him who she is... then being flattered when he repeats it back to her.  Wendy's the best... really.  Anyhoo... she arrives at her super special (open) audition to find she's got a lot of competition today.


Meanwhile, Angel has decided to visit the campaign headquarters of Maureen McMeal.  She strolls in and proceeds to just blurt out everything that's going on to some poor aide.  The look on this poor woman's eyes... perfect!  Angel comes across like a lunatic here... and it's all done wonderfully.  The aide says she'll call Ms. McMeal, but instead calls her bouncer, Bernie... who introduces poor Angel to the pavement.


Meanwhile again... Wendy is about to go on stage right after a punk rock Madonna.  The poor punkette is booted from the stage in mid-act, and Wendy takes her spotlight... which is also sadly short-lived.  A few Valium later, Ruelle gives her the hook.


Back at McMeal HQ, a pizza is being delivered... hey, not so fast, I know that pizza delivery boy.  Yup, it's Angel... trying to crib on the madcap antics usually reserved for her roommate.  She's again tossed by big Bern, but causes such a stir that a conference room empties out.


In that conference room was the woman of the hour herself... Maureen McMeal.  Angel is ranting from the sidewalk and has her face pressed into the glass.  Maureen notices, and... well...


She turns to Bernie and says... to keep that girl away from her.  Wow, that's cold sis!  Will Angel take "hell no" for an answer?  That's going to have to wait until the next issue, my friends.


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A whole lotta "losin' it" in this issue.  Angel loses her mind over the sight of Maureen McMeal, who she believes to be in reality her sister Mary Beth.  I enjoyed the way in which this scene played out.  It was convenient... but not easy.  I dug that.  I really liked Angel's expository explosion in the campaign office.  Knowing her like we do, it all made sense... but to the uninitiated?  She's a loony toon!

I'm guessing as the series is winding down that Maureen is really her sister, and we're about to learn a whole lot about the Love family.

Wendy's audition was quite funny.  We've only seen her "act" for the birds and cockroaches... never in front of a real audience.  I was happy to see that she was still rather terrible on stage (and on the street).  I feared for a moment that the goofy director would somehow like the cut of her jib and offer her the lead in an ironic kinda way.  

Oh!  We get another visit from our old friend Mr. Bum.  I'm tellin' ya folks, Angel Love continuity is tight as a drum!  I've been waiting to see this fella again from the first chapter so many months ago.  Glad to know he's still a fan of our girl Wendy.

Overall, things are briskly building to our climax, and it's still an enjoyable ride.  My only complaint is that it's going to end really soon.

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