The Marvel Comics company has many great super-hero teams but none are better than the Champions.
I know this because they're called the Champions and that must mean they're the best.
Right?
Well, perhaps not. If ever Marvel had a useless super-hero team, it had to be this bunch who just seemed to be made up of whatever super-doers the company had hanging around and out of work.
As that was basically the function of the Defenders, and these heroes weren't even interesting enough to get into that team, you have to suspect this outfit really is fighting a lost cause.
Also, in what mad world are Ghost Rider, the Angel, Iceman, Hercules, Black Widow and a blonde Russian woman whose name I've forgotten, a logical combination of talents?
Still, I'm nothing if not a lover of plucky underdogs and I did, in my youth, have a couple of issues of their mag.
One of those was #12 which featured not one but three epic clashes, jam-packed into just a single tale. So, all these years later, just what do my shattered senses make of it?
We join the action midway through, as the Champions catch up with Black Goliath and help him fight Stilt-Man.
When I say, "Help," despite there being six of them and one of them being Hercules, they prove to be no assistance at all and, in the end, Black Goliath has to chase off after Stilt-Man on his own while the Champions, who he's got fed up of and told to shove off, lose interest in the fight and return to their massive headquarters, for some quality Me Time.
I think I'm starting to see why they're not one of Marvel's most revered teams. I can't see the Avengers just losing interest in a fight and going off home while leaving a rookie to fight a villain that all six of them combined couldn't stop.
Anyway, when they get back to their HQ, they find they have a visitor, a young woman called Reggie Clayborne who has a box her love interest stole from Tony Stark's factory. Barely has she finished expositing all over them than the object inside the box starts to rapidly expand and then the Stranger walks in through the wall, declaring that he's there to help them.
Needless to say, that's the cue for the Champions to start trying to smash his face in because... ...ah, why not? They're Marvel heroes. What else are they going to do?
Needless to say, the team that couldn't stop Stilt-Man doesn't get very far with thwarting one of the universe's most powerful beings.
However, the rapidly expanding object does and, as it starts to swallow up the Stranger, he tells them it's a weird kind of bomb he once built and that it'll expand until it encapsulates the whole solar system and then turn solid and contract and kill them all - even Stilt-Man!
Realising this might not be a good thing, they agree to go off somewhere to get the one object the Stranger says will fix things. And, with his magic wavy hand, the Stranger sends them to a far-off world to do it.
Unfortunately, when they get there, they quickly discover that world belongs to Kamo Tharn and his horde and now he's going to try and kill them!
It's a story that's not short of incident. Not many comics would start with a fight against one foe, abandon it halfway through, introduce the Stranger, launch into a whole new storyline and then fling its heroes into a totally different world, to face their third foe of the issue.
This does, at least, mean you don't get bored.
But this might be its main problem.
It's a bit too conflicty.
Not only do we get the clashes with Stilt-Man, the Stranger and Kamo Tharn but the Champions themselves seem to be constantly at odds with each other. It's clear the Angel doesn't like being told what to do by Iceman, Ghost Rider doesn't trust the blonde Russian woman whose name I can't remember, and the Black Widow, at one point, tells off Ghost Rider for getting in her way. It's like, seriously, can't we all take a chill pill?
Still, in fairness, the tale does make you want to read next month's issue, to find out just how the problem of the expanding bomb gets solved.
John Byrne's art is, of course, perfectly pleasing to the eye. It seems to lack detail compared to some of his other work, suggesting he might not be giving it everything. Or maybe that's just how he was drawing things at this particular stage of his career.
Main annoyances of the tale are the sight of seven super-heroes totally failing to make any headway against a foe who gets beaten up by Daredevil every six months, and the fact we're never told who the blonde Russian woman actually is. I've seen her before, in some Hulk story or other but her name escapes me.
Still, I've always liked the Stranger, even if he's quite annoying. It's just a shame we don't get to see more of him before he's swallowed up.
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27 comments:
The blonde Russian girl was Darkstar, Steve.
Her powers were kinda like those of the villain Blackout.
There must be something funky about having darklight/negative-light/blacklight powers. If I remember correctly Darkstar had mental issues, just like Blackout did.
I had quite a few issues of the Champs, but I passed on this one. With little coin in my pockets, I tried to get the best 3 or 4 books off the spinner. In as little time possible.
I really only got Champions because of Ghost Rider, and he wasn't on the cover. Also, the Stranger has been one of my least favorite villains.
If Stiltman was on the cover, it may have been a different story!
Back around the late 80's or so, when I wasn't an avid reader anymore, I casually bought one of the last issues of the Defenders 1st series.
The "non"-membership was Valkery, Hellcat, the Beast, Iceman, Angel, and some whiney monster-guy called Gargoyle.
The art & writting was horrible. A sad demise for a book that sometimes was great.
Thanks for the Darkstar info, KD.
I'm still gobsmacked that Stilt-Man managed to take on seven super-heroes and still come out on top. Suddenly, my respect for Daredevil has increased dramatically.
Cool beans!
I dug this issue. Slick Byrne art, and Stiltman!!!
Stiltman meets Black Goliath! It hadda happen, true believers.
This issue occurred right after the Stranger was chased off the Moon by Adam Warlock and the Gardener, in what was the latter's debut in Marvel Team-Up #55. Another fine issue.
I can see ol' Stilty temporarily holding off the Champions, who weren't the most organized pack of cats around.
M.P., Vice-President and Acting Treasurer, Stiltman Appreciation Society
Dunno M.P. - I've got a lot of time for Stiltman too, but even so I'd have thought a low selling book like the Champions would have been better off with a boost from, say, Dr Doom. And a more recognizable guest star than Black Goliath (better to wrap up his cancelled storyline in a team up book).
Anyway, great review Steve, and pretty much spot on as ever. That said, I totally get the logic of putting the Black Widow in a book with Ghost Rider - how is that not a brilliant idea? The problem was adding the two most boring of the old X-Men, and Hercules never exactly shattered anyones senses either.
Personally, if it was up to me, I'd have ditched those three and added Shang-Chi, Brother Voodoo and Thundra instead. Thats kung fu, blaxploitation and wimmin's lib to go with the horror biker and spy; add Darkstar for a bit of communism and you'd have the most 70s comic ever. It couldn't have failed!
(I should have been a Marvel editor).
-sean
Sean, you should have! That certainly would have been an interesting combo.
And Thundra was always a lot more compelling than Hercules. There was a short-lived team-up with Thundra, Ben Grimm, Tigra, and the Impossible Man in the pages of F.F. back in the late '70's.
Now, that too was an interesting combo. It only lasted for a couple issues or so, but it made for some interesting dialogue.
Ah, what might have been...
I always thought the Defenders was an interesting comic because of it's diversity. You had the new, female Red Guardian from the U.S.S.R. hanging out with Luke Cage, Hellcat and Valkyrie (temperamentally very different) teaming up, and Nighthawk, a rich guy playing superhero, desperately trying to keep the Hulk in line.
M.P.
Well written write-up Steve! Much enjoyed.
A quest to find the one ingredient to stop a bomb from going off?
The Stilt Man?
The Stranger?
This one had it all!
Of course this one had it all Charlie - it was written by the same geezer as Woodgod!
Steve doesn't just throw this blog together you know.
Actually, if I'd been editor at the time, anyone who came to me with an idea like Woodgod would get fired (its the only way to be sure).
And I'd have had Rick Jones killed off.
-sean
Sean, that last comment was just your legendary sarcasm, right?
Sure Kd.
-sean
M.P., I grabbed a FF book that had Thundra, Tigra, Impy, and Ben standing over a robot and facing military forces on the cover. I was juiced! When I got home it was a reprint!! Man, talk about "don't judge a book by it's cover"!!!
Never saw that team.
Ghost Rider never seemed to me like a team-guy. Maybe in Johnny Blaze control mode, but if Zarathos is tapped too much, he's not going to cooperate with anyone. The Rider was probably just throw in for cool factor.
Though Warren funded the team, I'm sure everyone knows Natasha was the leader. It would have been great to see Nat butting heads with Thundra, with Thundy standing down. Thundra would have been a great substitute for Hercules.
I could almost believe our boy Stiltman could flatten her more than Herc. Barely.
They could've had a better, more trailblazing team, if it consisted of Widow, Thundra, Tigra, Darkstar, Angel, Iceman, Ghost Rider, & Black Goliath.
It would've been the first 50/50 gender mix team, with some diversity.
If that was too many characters, Bobby could've quit and gone back to university.
That's where Iceman my have discovered his potential gay-bi leanings, instead of just turning him into a fopish horny fairy like in current comics.
By the way, "Iceman MY discovered" was supposed to be "MAY discovered". That was a spellchecker error, not a Freudian slip.
Let the jokes come, if they may, oh my brothers.
I'm a big boy...sweeties...lol!
Speaking of Iceman current comics, I heard he had a battle with Juggernaut, but took 2 issues to fight-off an armed mercenary, while mincing around light-in-the-loafers.
Do any of you guys read this stuff?
The Champions/Avengers Magneto & Dr. Doom crossover was good reading.
It’s interesting to note that said writer to this issue was not content to destroy a man, family, town, city, region, country, planet, solar system, or even a galaxy! No way dudes! He pulled out all the stops! The entire Universe, even though infinite, is going to be destroyed!
Now is that an existential threat or what?
Indeed, it’s a wonder this concept did not turn into a summer free-for-all with multiple crossovers at Marvel! And given we are talking the entire Universe, I’m surprised it could not have become a Marvel-DC cross over?
Who else but Superman and Reed Richards to save us? Tell me? Who else? OK... Dr. Doom and Lex Luthor or Braniac 5 lend a hand.
I know what you're referring to K.D., I've got the same issue of F.F. where the cover of the Thing-Impossible Man-Tigra-Thundra team-up got mixed up with the rather generic cover for a Dreaded Deadline Doom reprint.
Who was minding the store over there?!
But if you do find that issue I mentioned (181#, maybe?) it's pretty cool.
Then again, I'd understand if you just said, "Aw, to heck with the whole dumb thing."
M.P.
Actually they teamed up in #179 and #181 I think. And more or less hung around for a couple issue after that.
The Impossible Man hung around a for even a few issues more because he found out the Baxter Building had a television in it. Ben Grimm was less than thrilled.
Some people just can't take a hint.
Allright, I'm done with this subject now.
M.P.
Who'd have thought the Impossible Man would need a tv?
Thundra joined a women's wrestling team after that, M.P., in an issue of Two-In-One. Which definitely seems like an idea we should have seen more of.
(And you thought you were done with the subject)
-sean
I remember that women's wrestling plotline, Sean. How could I not.
I thought it was inspired. But they were doing a lot of interesting things in MTiO in those days.
That whole Project Pegasus epic, where Ben Grimm was in charge of security.
They finally figured out a way for the Thing to encounter various Marvel characters without it seeming contrived. You didn't who was gonna show up.
M.P.
Man! Charlie remembers the whole wrestling Thundra shtick though he had punched out of comics pretty much by then.
He recalls longing for a female Roller Derby shtick. Women's Roller Derby was a real hit in Charlie'w world of TV!
Jack Kirby did a roller derby story, Charlie - played with flamethrowers - in an issue of Captain America. The one with the skateboarding Cap on the cover that Steve likes so much (well, "likes" might be overstating things, but he has mentioned it a few times).
-sean
No, I'd be into reading that. Luckily FF back issues are fairly reasonable.
Roller derby was big at our house sometime in the 60's. My dad was such a fan He took us to the drive-inn to see a roller derby film, which I believe starred Raquel Welch.
A much better film is Unholy Rollers. It stars the lovely, late, great Claudia Jennings. RIP.
As far as the Impossible Man goes, I've found that he's entertaining when he shows up for 1, MAYBE 2 issues.
After that, I kinda get annoyed by him, just like our heroes do.
Thundra would have made a better subject for an MCU movie than Captain Marvel.
When she was first introduced, I didn't care for her. She just seemed a little preachy on feminism to my adolescent mind, but she grew on me.
When she joined the Frightful Four, I knew the FF were going to get a run for their money.
Man, if they would've had Red Sonja time-travel, team-up with Thundra, Black Widow, Jean Grey, and maybe Pepper Potts in a feminized Iron Man suit to build a team, I'd buy every issue. They could've called it "Ginger Justice". Lol!
Then again, that many red-heads together would probably spend more time fighting each other than the villains! Lol.
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