Oh I give up. Writing a review in the style of an Iron Fist comic is a pain in the backside. It's even worse than if you tried to do it in the style of a Shang-Chi adventure.
Anyway, Iron Fist, I have spoken before of my inherent frustration with him, that, like Popeye, he had a means to defeat any foe but, like Popeye, never bothered to use it until he'd been knocked from pillar to post, making you wonder why he didn't just use it at the start of the fight and save himself the trouble.
I did, however, generally draw pleasure from his tales, mostly because they were nicely drawn and who doesn't like to see a good dose of martial arts mayhem?
I did, therefore, in my younger days, own a couple of issues of his book. One of which was issue #3, in which all kinds of chaos broke out.
So, around forty years since I first read it, what do I make of it now?
Our hero and Misty Knight are flying into the world famous London Airport to look for their friend Colleen but don't even manage to land before their plane's blown up by an armoured villain calling himself the Ravager.
The inevitable fight breaks out between protagonist and antagonist but the villain escapes the scene, leaving Iron Fist to visit the now hospitalised Misty before having an argument with her about priorities, and then setting off in search of the villain.
By following the Ravager's radioactive footprints, Fisty tracks him down to a lab in that well-known scientific research facility the General Post Office Tower, whereupon another fight breaks out.
Finally grasping that it might be a good idea to break out the spinach, Iron Fist revs up his knuckles and delivers the coup de grĂ¢ce - but that only succeeds in wrecking the armour of his foe who now reveals himself to be Radion and promptly blows up the tower, with himself and Iron Fist still in it. Radion may be named after a brand of washing powder but that doesn't stop him trying to make a mess of London.
It's certainly a tale that isn't afraid of flinging you right into the action, with carnage breaking out from almost the moment we get past the opening splash page.
But, exploding planes aside, the thing that really smashed me in the face, reading it, is it's strongly reminiscent of that early Captain Britain adventure in which the similarly armoured Hurricane smashes up a London airport. As both tales were written by Chris Claremont, it's hard to believe the boy Chris wasn't knowingly drawing on that tale when he conceived this one.
It also struck me that, as drawn by John Byrne, our hero Danny Rand looks remarkably like Captain Britain's alter-ego Brian Braddock.
Also, like Brian Braddock, he's not that interesting a person. The real star of the issue, character-wise, is Misty Knight who probably deserves her own comic more than he does.
Admittedly, she does act like a total jerk at the hospital, berating Danny because he wants to save the whole of London from destruction, rather than concentrate on finding Colleen. To be honest, wanting to save an entire city from annihilation doesn't seem an unreasonable goal for a super-hero. I can only put Misty's weird attitude down to
More importantly, this issue, we find out she's bionic. I mean, come on, how can they not give Genocide-Ignoring Bionic Misty Knight her own book after that revelation?
Aside from the somewhat manufactured conflict between Misty and Danny, my big reservation with the comic is there's too much human suffering in it. Not only does Misty get impaled on a big lump of metal, have to be rushed to the hospital and spend the rest of the yarn with an arm missing but half the people on the plane die, including a child who seems to be in the story just to be half set on fire and then killed. Call me a sissy but I like super-hero comics where no one actually gets hurt.
It's also quite annoying that Danny and Misty keep talking about Colleen but, as far as I could see, nowhere in the story do they tell you who Colleen is or what's supposed to have happened to her. A quick bit of back story might have been nice for newcomers.
Anyway, it's a competent story with plenty of incident and a solid but not, by his own standards, exceptional art job by Byrne but the overly melodramatic nature of Claremont's writing and the human suffering quotient are somewhat off-putting for me.
It is good, though, to see Radion show up. He was, for me, always one of Marvel's better 1970s villains and a noticeable cut above most of its wrongdoers of that era.
Misty did subsequently star in Daughters of the Dragon in Deadly Hands of Kung Fu with Colleen Wing who Fisty and Misty were searching for in this issue. Fisty and Misty sounds like a great title for a series!
ReplyDeleteLenin's ghost that was another great review Steve, even if you did give up the attempt at doing Claremont fairly quickly.
ReplyDeleteAgree that Misty Knight was more of a star than Iron Fist. A couple of appearances in anthology titles like DHKF and Bizarre Adventures notwithstanding, it does seems strange the Daughters of the Dragon never got a try out for their own series in Marvel Premiere or something, especially as even geeks like Woodgod and 3-D Man got a shot.
Wasn't there a Radion at DC too? Personally, I'm not entirely convinced by super-villains that inspire a brand of washing powder...
-sean
Sean, apparently, Radion was an element that was lethal to the New Gods.
ReplyDeleteSean and Simayl, I am glad to hear that Misty did at least get some action outside the pages of Iron Fist.
Thats right about the New Gods Steve, but Radion was also a (somewhat obscure) Superman villain.
ReplyDelete-sean
I fancy myself as something of an expert on lame-ass supervillains, but I have never heard of Radion the Atomic Man.
ReplyDeleteThen again, I have never actually heard of somebody actually reading Iron Fist.
M.P.
I'm not sure I recall the Radion either M.P. I thought I did reading the review, but I just realized I got him mixed up with Nuklo.
ReplyDelete-sean
Or maybe you were thinking of the Cobalt Man, who also had radioactive powers.
ReplyDeleteAh, radioactivity. Is there anything it can't do?
Aside from terminal cancer, of course.
M.P.
Looks like Nuklo from the Avengers to me too, Sean, lol.
ReplyDeleteI have one dim recollection of reading an Iron Fist but I have to imagine it was part of Marvel Team Up or something?
Kung fu, Monsters... I suspect Millie the Model outsold all of them, together.
After Chernobyl, you'd figure there'd be a lotta superpowered people walking or flying or jumping around. In fact, much of the former Soviet bloc must be highly irradiated due to the general standard of Russian safety protocols, which leaves a little something to be desired.
ReplyDeleteAt least if you wanna live to see fifty.
M.P.
Yeah, Charlie, Iron Fist had a short storyline in Marvel Team-Up. A bigger villain was able to steal the iron fist away from him. Spidey & the Daughters of the Dragon had to save Fist's butt in the next issue.
ReplyDeleteI only had a few Iron Fist books. I know I had his first appearance, and the Sabertooth & X-Men issues.
Vaguely recall him fighting Iron Man, but I'm not certain.
Sean-
ReplyDeleteIf Radion had a laundry detergent type power, then he would've been a hero instead of a villain.
He could help the good guys battle the dreaded "ring around the collar" in their costumes.
Yeah, Mr. Claremont was not above recycling an idea.
ReplyDeleteAs far as Claremont inserting a nonsensical conflict to ramp up the drama, I think that’s pretty common in comics, especially the Silver & Bronze Age Marvel comics (haven’t read must post-Bronze Age so can’t comment on that).
Actually, I like superhero comics where nobody gets killed or seriously hurt, myself.
In spite of all this, I rather enjoyed this issue.