Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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And so is reading war comics.
I admit it, it's a genre that's always held little interest for me, but the public's demanded I review a product of that field and, so, I must.
I could cheat and do an issue of Weird War Tales, which was the only war book I ever liked, as a child, mostly because I saw it as being a horror mag.
However, I've already reviewed the odd issue of that title, so I feel I should dive in and do what can only be termed a pure war-publication.
For that purpose, I've chosen a Sgt. Rock issue, mostly because XTC said Sgt Rock was going to help me and also because this one has one of those covers where the hero's about to walk straight into a whole heap of deadly menace while thinking everything's fine.
Where would the average war comic be without such a cover concept?
But, then again, is this an average war comic?
Here's where I find out.
The book kicks off with the tale What's It Like? in which Robert Kanigher and Russ Heath spin a yarn wherein a desk-bound sergeant, whose job is to give Rock his latest missions, repeatedly bemoans to the Rockster about how unfair it is that he's stuck in an office while Rock and his gang are out having fun fighting the war.
In fairness, it's easy to see why that sergeant thinks this, as he keeps handing Rock assignments that, on paper, look a doddle, like pulling a jeep out of a river, making road signs point the wrong way, or finding the general's lost dog.
However, such is Rock's monumental bad luck that, every time he tries to perform one of these tasks, he blunders into a mountain of enemy hostility which leaves half his men dead and he himself lucky to still be alive.
For some reason, it never occurs to Rock to point this out to his fellow sergeant and disabuse him of his misconceptions.
Indeed, Rock is a strangely taciturn character in those meetings and not at all like the hyper-emotional weirdo I first encountered in the pages of his Brave and the Bold team-up with Batman. Up until now, that team-up has been my only exposure to the character and may have given me completely the wrong impression.
As someone whose nearest reference point to the adventures of Rock is having read the exploits of Nick Fury and his Howlin' Commandos, I find it a startlingly sombre and bleak outing in which everyone but Rock is basically cannon fodder and even the simplest of duties turns into a rolling meat-mincer.
To be honest, although I wouldn't want to spend a lifetime reading such stories, I do much prefer it to the adventures of Fury in which going into battle-zones, while armed only with an umbrella, a mouth full of slang, and a trumpet, is the route to a bucketload of fun.
But there's not just one tale in this book. This being an early 1970s DC title, there's also a back-up strip.
This one - Red Rain - is supplied by Kanigher and the redoubtable ER Cruz and is like something straight out of Weird War Tales, in which a 1917 troop of soldiers keep being rescued by a mysterious Frenchman who turns out to be a statue. I have a feeling Stan Ridgway probably read a fair few DC comics before he wrote Camouflage.
Again, it's a sombre and downbeat tale and a total contrast to Nick Fury's rompings.
So, did I survive my encounter with war?
Yes, I did.
In truth, it was a painless read, although, with both tales' lack of character development, and a reliance on nothing but a central concept to carry them forward, I can't say I feel any urge to read any more such issues.
I am, however, curious to discover whether the depiction of Rock here is typical.
24 comments:
SDC - Glad to see you took the plunge.
Heath art! Yowza! That guy could draw!
Your Rock story is quite typical of DC's war comics. Far more realistic than Fury and his sophomoric antics.
Yet, you can only read so many stories wherein the last bullet in the pistol takes out that Tiger Tank or ME 109.
I could suggest you take a crack at The Unknown Soldier tales and Haunted Tank. They offer a cool spin on DC's war comics.
Lastly, probably the most realistic military comic was Sad Sack. I suspect MP (et al?) could back me up. No... the tales in Sad Sack didn't literally happen in the Army, but the damn goofiness of the military is on a parallel with the Sack! I mean, when you put big, powerful machines (trucks, tanks, whatever) in the hands of 18 year olds, shit happens!
Ask M.P. about the accuracy of Sad Sack? Thats just mean Charlie.
Anyhow, I agree with my colleague Mr Horse 47 about that story being typical Steve, at least in that 70s period.
It is bleak and - this being the time of Vietnam (and DC's "relevant" era) - has something of a... not exactly anti-war vibe, but disenchanted. At the same time, Kanigher had been a prolific comic book writer working in all genres for ages, and theres still quite a bit of the traditional war story about his Sgt Rock (taking out that German tank on his own while looking for the general's dog is real square-jawed action hero stuff).
That makes for a fairly uneasy mix, but Russ Heath makes it work.
He was such an amazing artist, he even made Atlas' Planet of Vampires readable.
-sean
I am very familiar with Sad Sack. My Ma, who is a fiend for flea markets and rummage sales, picked up an old hard-back copy from the '40's, I believe, and gave it to me. But I knew about the character before that. And Bill Mauldin's work too, that guy was a genius.
Military life is very often ridiculous and absurd. A lotta the time it's just one damn dumb thing after another. And I was in during peace-time. I have no idea what a war is like.
Fancy standing in the freezing rain on a parade field for three hours so a general could get out of his helicopter, look everybody up and down, get back in his chopper and fly away? Cool beans!
Like the idea of cleaning toilets that thirty other guys have been assaulting for a whole week?
Yippee!
Ah, it wasn't all bad, I guess. Sometimes I didn't have to do much of anything.
The first thought I had about that Sgt. Rock cover, was "Goddam Kraut! Atrocity committin' Huns! Les boches!!"
Taking a guy's dog hostage, on top of everything else...
As Charlie will no doubt confirm, Herman the German is wily, devious, and not to be trusted.
M.P.
Steve, just as you, I preferred Weird War Stories over most other military comics, me being such a "monster kid".
The Haunted Tank was alright, but if it was a little darker like DC's horror books, I would have picked it up more.
Haunted Tank would probably be a great DCU attempt, if they could bump-up the horror aspect to an "R" rating.
Speaking of the DCU, has anyone seen Wonder Woman 1984?
K.D., I liked the Haunted Tank and Weird War Stories too!
I only have a few of 'em, but one issue had a story about this Italian general in Greece during W.W.II. He demanded that the loveliest woman in the village be brought to him. Or something like that.
She entered his quarters, a shapely woman wearing a veil, and when he tore it off it turned out she was a Gorgon! You can guess what happened then. That story gave me the willies.
The Haunted Tank story I remember was where the Germans take the brain out of a fatally wounded Wehrmacht officer (because he's some kinda military genius) and put it into an almost invulnerable android.
War comics and weirdness seem to go hand in hand. There was this great arc in Swamp Thing where Swampy goes back in time for some reason to W.W. II and clashes with a younger version of his arch-enemy, Anton Arcane, who is a colonel in the Wehrmacht. Sgt. Rock and the Unknown Soldier show up.
Then the Swamp Thing goes back in time further (I dunno why, I don't got the issue that explains it) to W.W. I, where he encounters a still younger Arcane and the Enemy Ace.
Haven't seen the Wonder Woman movie, I'll wait till it comes on T.V., but Kristin Wiig (that's a Dutch name, trust me) as the Cheetah sounds interesting.
M.P.
MP - Yeah, the Army could be one dumb ass thing after another. Hence my vote for Sad Sack being the most realistic. Good point about Mauldin. That guy was a genius. That one comic where the soldier is going to shoot his worn out jeep, to put it out of its misery, is classic.
My beef with Haunted Tank was that they used a traitor as the ghost, a confederate cavalry general, to guide the Tank Commander.
Steve - I do have a vague recall bout Rock teaming up with Bats in Brave and the Bold. And, like you mention, that recall is that he was a screaming nut case. Really out of character if one had been reading Our Army at War!
Sean, Steve, and the gang!
I must say that Kirby's work on The Losers for DC is truly compelling. I don't know why but it just seems to work. Just gave a real element of "serious" to the stories.
Would you kindly consider reviewing a Kirby ""The Losers" Steve?
Hear hear!
I remember that B n'B story. If that came out in the early Seventies, then Rock woulda been in, well, his early seventies. I think the enemy was hinted at as possibly being Hitler, but they didn't come out and say it, exactly. He must've been pretty old.
In Marvel Comics they apparently saved Hitler's brain and cloned him.
I never understood the appeal of cloning Hitler. If we're gonna clone people, let's clone somebody who's necessary.
...Might I suggest Linda Ronstadt?
M.P.
Steve- thanks for indulging us with a look at DC War. As others have noted above, this is fairly typical. I've read some Rock, but find the Losers and Unknown Soldier more intriguing. And particularly Enemy Ace, whose tales are impressive, if a bit repetitive. At any rate, the art you find in these books is often striking. Heath and Kubert being tops, although I also like Jerry Grandenetti...
And yes, I've read Sgt. Fury. And though Marvel is normally my choice, I go with DC for this particular genre...
I think that's a fair statement, Red. I think D.C. war comics were a lot better than Marvel's stuff.
Anybody remember a D.C. comic from around '76 called Blitzkrieg? The war from the German soldier's point of view. It only ran for five issues. I had one of 'em when I was a kid. I remember it as being fairly brutal for the time.
Nothing funny or uplifting about it, which comes as no surprise. No wonder it tanked (no pun intended) so quickly.
M.P.
Charlie - if that dog in Sgt.Rock had been in Yorkshire, it would've been stolen & sold by now!
Phillip
M.P.
Doing wacky things with Hitler in comics & film is a great trope. He's a perfect villain, and very few people get offended in misusing him.
The best Hitler-themed sci fi film has to be Boys From Brazil, where they clone about 100 Hitlers. Gregory Peck did an excellent Josef Mengala.
Red - it's interesting that with Enemy Ace and with Haunted Tank that the vehicles themselves seem to take on a role in the plot.
It's not like they were "alive" in any sense like a sci fi flick but as you'd read the story you'd be thinking, "C'mon... c'mon... you can do it!"
However, cheering for a German pilot was always a bit odd to me, as was having a Confederate general (and not necessarily a good one at that) provide the mental support to the Tankers.
And yes... DC did seem to have solid artists on those war strips: Heath, Kubert, even Kirby. No complaints in that department. Though perhaps artistic inequities are not as obvious in a war comic as one with men in tights?
Phillip! LOL! I had the same immediate thought when I saw that cover! But it was more like... "I wonder if the Germans bought the dog from a 'Yorkshire man?'" LOL.
Charlie, Sean, Redartz and MP, thanks for your insights into the war comics of our youth.
KD, I haven't seen Wonder Woman 1984. I saw Justice League, for the first time, last night and it didn't feel a million miles away from the 1990s Justice League TV movie, just with a bigger budget.
Phillip if those Germans were from Yorkshire, they'd already have brainwashed that dog into thinking it was a whippet.
I will consider reviewing The Losers, Charlie but can make no promises...
Charlie- have you read "Enemy Ace: War in Heaven"? By Garth Ennis, tells the story of Von Hammer flying in WWII. Quite interesting to see his conflict- serving his country while despising the Nazi regime. Worth a look if you haven't seen it.
For those who haven't read "Enemy Ace", Hans Von Hammer is the protagonist, a German WWI flying Ace with a conscience. Kind of an antiwar war comic.
Red - I will have to check out that Hammer! My problem is my comic reading list is growing exponentially! I seem to recall having the first issue. It was in TBP format? (Doesn't he get an ME 109 in that first TBP? But no combat yet?)
- Our buddy Kill Dumpster is sending me the entire run of League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. I never read it.
- I am selling off my XMen (post issue 100) on ebay and am rereading them b/c I can't remember them in the first place, lol. They were all "read once and bagged" so super nice condition but truth is the comic market is dying... so not looking at a windfall.
- I keep trying to dig out at least one comic from 50 years ago, so I can recall what was going on with Marvel so as to prepare my remarks in advance for SDC's blog, lol.
That "War in Heaven" does sound interesting.
Ennis is nothing if not surprising.
M.P.
How ever did we get so far into a thread on war comics before Garth Ennis' name came up?
Yeah, I'll check that Enemy Ace out too Red, thanks.
I expect Ennis did a good job, as he's really into one of my fave 70s war comics, which also happen to be about a German, and from a similar point of view - Hellman Of Hammer Force (from Action and later Battle).
www.mikedorey.co.uk/hellman-of-hammer-force
The only Enemy Ace stories I'm familiar with - apart from that Neal Adams "crossover" with Batman - were the cool back-ups Kanigher did with the mighty Howard Victor Chaykin in Men Of War.
Anyone know much about Men Of War? It was a short-lived title from DC cover featuring a series called Gravedigger. Which was unusual as it was about a black unit, and of course comics - most media in fact - generally ignore the whole issue of segregation in WW2 set stories.
-sean
I was never a fan of war comics but did pick up DCs war comic output at times due to the great art they usually had including work by the likes of Kubert, Heath, Toth, Adams and Ric Estrada etc. In particular I loved the Losers ( I think that was in the comic "Our Fighting Forces") with John Sevrin's amazing art (and as previously noted Kirby's run on that title was great as well) .Didn't DC also do a comic looking at the war from the view ofsome German solders called "Blitzkrieg "?
Blitzkrieg - "Battle sagas of WW2 as seen through enemy eyes!" - was really short-lived Paul. If the issue I had was anything to go by though I wouldn't say it was from the view of some German soldiers exactly; at least not in the same way as a series like Hellman, which was not unlike, say, the film Cross Of Iron.
The lead story was about the Warsaw ghetto uprising, a surprisingly full on atrocity show that definitely made an impression on 11 year old me - presumably the Comics Code considered it educational, as its hard to see how it would have been passed otherwise.
The back-up was about Attila the Hun (seriously!) and his armies meeting some resistance while plundering Gaul.
-sean
After looking at the cover to Blitzkrieg #1 I am dead certain I had it! The name Hugo is the key as in "Do not shoot [the little children] Hugo."
Steve - you got your work cut out for you!
A Haunted Tank
An Unknown Soldier
A Losers by Kirby
Chop Chop Buddy!
Me and MP will call cadence whilst you read! Ready MP?
"Hey, hey Captain Jack!
Meet me down by the railroad tracks!
With that comic in my hand!
I'm gonna be a reading man!"
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