Sunday 27 February 2022

Man-Thing #6. And When I Died.....

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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Man-Thing #6, And When I Died...
When I think of Marvel's Man-Thing, two words instantly leap to mind.

"Swamp," and, "Thing."

But two other words leap to mind.

"Dead," and, "Clowns."

And this is the issue responsible for that.

I first encountered the tale thanks to the pages of Marvel UK's Planet of the Apes weekly which reprinted Manny's adventures for the British public to consume, and here I am, encountering it again - but, this time, in that there fancy colour they've invented.

Will it prove as haunting as ever?

Will I even be able to understand it?

As we join the tale, Darrel the clown's just killed himself in the swamp.

Man-Thing #6. And When I Died.....
For most clowns, that would be terminal but he's made of stronger stuff. 
As our assembled cast of series regulars and one-off visitors watch in horror, his ghost appears and, for the entertainment of three mysterious hooded critics, uses those people to reenact his life.

He was, it seems, the son of a rich man who thought of nothing but making money. After the death of that individual, the now-rich Darrel decided to become a clown and give others' lives the joy and laughter his own childhood had lacked.

But, with him increasingly embittered by the state of the world, his act became ever more sinister, until the night he discovered his beloved Ayla the circus aerialist had been told by Garvey the circus owner to feign romantic feelings for him to keep his money flowing into the business.

Devastated, the clown killed himself and, now, representatives of Heaven, Hell and some place between are here to sit in judgement on his soul.

Man-Thing #6. The Jury
There's only one problem.

Having seen his life story, none of those representatives feel his soul's worthy of their realm and, so, decide to destroy it, leading to a fight between them and the Man-Thing, earlier drafted in by Darrel to represent his rebellious streak.

Still, it all ends when Ayla reveals she did love him after all. Thus, the representative of Heaven accepts Darrel's soul, takes it away with him and our tale ends.

How could anyone not love this story? It's Steve Gerber doing the sort of investigation of a character's life that he clearly loved to do. I remember him pulling the same kind of stunt with Nighthawk in The Defenders.

The one failing is the tale feels like it fizzles out at the end, lacking a suitably dramatic denouement and creating a resolution a little too pat but the rest of the story's strong enough to compensate for that.

Man-Thing #6, Darrel is miserable
But the real reason for reading the tale is Mike Ploog's artwork. Here, he's clearly going for it, happy to exploit the surrealism and theatricality of the night's events and giving us a string of compelling images.

The central character - Man-Thing - is, of course, almost irrelevant to proceedings but that's because he's a brainless walking pile of sludge with no real motivation, meaning he's nearly always going to be a supporting character in his own series.

Are there any other 1970s Man-Thing tales as memorable as this one?

Off the top of my head, I can't really think of one. You, however, may know otherwise...

Man-Thing #6, Manny vs the jury

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

More memorable 1970s Man-Thing tales, Steve?
Not to knock the one you've just reviewed, as any story with lines like "I don't think he wants to be rich - he's a sick lad" is ok with me, but what about ghost pirates in space?
And wasn't there one with a talking duck...?

Of course inevitably my mind will always turn to Giant-Size Man-Thing.
Partly because yes, I am that childish, but also mainly as the story in #3 is one of my favourite single issues of the 70s, an all-time classic blend of Marvel-style horror and sword & sorcery, beautifully drawn by the mighty Alfredo Alcala.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Btw, the first part of that story from Man-Thing #5 came out as one of those old Power Records adaptations.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0nOgOz6faE

Because its just the one issue and doesn't include #6 it ends with the clown just killing himself and his ghost saying "But now my soul is FREE I shall feel mortal pain no more... and so I can laugh, laugh forever!"
Which makes for a fantastically bleak ending that actually works better than the original two parter imo. But it does seem like an odd choice for a kids record.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Steve, I think you’re right — the Dead Clown story is the all-time best Gerber/ Ploog Man-Thing story, and therefore the best Man-Thing story, period. The next two stories in the sequence, 7/8: Fountain of Youth and 9/10: Dawg, are pretty dang great too (7 and 8 have the benefit of Ploog inking his own pencils, so they definitely look a bit more polished than the others) but the Dead Clown story is weirder, creepier, more experimental and theatrical (successfully so) and poignant as hell.

Any other Man-Thing stories in the same rarified ball-park? ‘The Kid’s Night Out’ from GIANT-SIZE MAN-THING 4 is a hell of a story, one of Gerber’s best ever, but sadly the art is pretty weak (Ron Wilson, Ed Hannigan and Frank Springer) so Gerber has to do pretty much ALL the heavy lifting. If Ploog had drawn it, it’d be going toe-to-toe with the Dead Clown story, easily.

b.t.

Colin Jones said...

Steve, didn't Man-Thing appear in Dracula Lives rather than Planet Of The Apes? Dracula Lives seems the more obvious place for him unless the clown story was in the merged POTA & DL (I'm just confused now).

Another Man-Thing story that comes to mind involved a group of Spanish Conquistadors who were still alive after hundreds of years which might be the "Fountain of Youth" mentioned by bt.

Steve W. said...

Colin, Man-Thing definitely appeared in Planet of the Apes after it merged with Dracula Lives, so it may indeed be that he migrated to the mag when Drac's own book folded.

Sean, I remember the space pirates story, conceptually, but recall nothing at all that happened in it.

Bt and Colin, I remember liking the conquistadores tale too.

Steve W. said...

Sean, I'm very disappointed that the Man-Thing record wasn't narrated by Stan Lee.

McSCOTTY said...

Man-Thing certainly appeared in Dracula Lives when it was titled "Dracula Lives featuring the Legion of Monsters" around issue 65 . I certainly recall him appearing in several covers with Dracula and Werewolf by night. And yes Man Thing set appeared in Planet of The Apes when it emerged with Dracula Lives.

Simon B said...

I thought I'd read all of Gerber's Man-Thing stories but I don't actually remember this one. Looks like I've got to hit eBay again :-)

One Man-Thing story that really resonated with me was quite late in Gerber's run, the Mad Viking / book-burning story in issues 16-18. It features the trademark Gerber surrealism and absurdity but also some chilling observations about the madness of mob mentality. If anything the story becomes sadly more relevant as time goes by...

Anonymous said...

The Mothers March for Decency, Simon - I recall that one too.

Man-Thing seemed to vary between stories like that - with Gerber sounding off about something on his mind in a manner not unlike what he went on to do in Howard the Duck - and random craziness with floating castles, barbarians coming out of peanut butter jars and whatnot.
Personally I preferred the latter, like the story with Howard's first appearance, or GS Man-Thing #3 which also did the wizards and demons thing with Korrek, Dakimh and Jennifer Kale, but better, because it had a great artist on it.

Not to knock Mike Ploog - controversial opinion trigger warning! - but his work in colour comics didn't really do it for me. Maybe because the inking wasn't always great?
He seemed better suited to the black & white mags, like the fantastic work he did on those Planet of the Apes stories with the brains in fishtanks inside Mt Rushmore.

-sean

Anonymous said...

b.t., On the subject of Man-Thing artists, have you read those end of the 80s Marvel Comics Presents issues with Gerber's return to the character, drawn by Tom Sutton?
If not, they're worth keeping an eye open for.

-sean

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Great write up Steve! Thanks!

Colin Jones said...

Sean, those giant brains in tanks weren't inside Mount Rushmore.

Anonymous said...

Sean:
Yes, I have that Gerber / Sutton Man-Thing serial in the original MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS run. It recently got reprinted in Marvel’s MAN-THING THE COMPLETE COLLECTION too. I’ve started reading it several times over the years but never got very far into it. It had Ollie North in it, I think? It’s on my Comic Book Bucket List, gotta force myself to read it someday.

Cerebus660:
I thought that Mad Viking / book-burning storyline was well-done too. Almost can’t believe book banning is a thing again, here in the ‘Real World’, but lord knows why it should surprise me. Also, I liked the first Mad Viking story, the one where he kills the Alice Cooper-type rock star. Once upon a time a guy like the Mad Viking seemed far-fetched and ridiculous. Nowadays he’d be storming the Capitol or have his own popular YouTube channel.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Sean:
Oh, and Sutton drew an earlier Man-Thing story, ‘There’s a Party in 6G!’ In G-S MAN-THING #5. I actually own a nice page from that one.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

b.t.-I thought that guy was based on Alice Cooper too!
Little did we know that Vinnie would dry out (after about twenty years) and end up as a born-again Christian Republican who plays golf with Pat Boone.
If the Man-Thing shambled onto that golf course, I wonder what would happen.
Something horrible, probably. Golf clubs and fear of the Lord would be of no use against the swamp monster.

M.P.

Colin Jones said...

MP, those Republican Christians are all fakes and hypocrites so if the Man-Thing showed up they definitely wouldn't wait around for their "faith" to save them.

Anonymous said...

Alice Cooper? I thought that rock star from the Viking story was based more on David Bowie, with a bit of Iggy Pop mixed in.
Perhaps thats just a more European perspective.
(No offence to the Brits here for the implication they might be European!)

Those giant brains in fishtanks weren't inside Mt Rushmore, Colin? Well, it has been quite a while since I read those stories, so maybe I'm getting stuff mixed up.

-sean

Anonymous said...

b.t., Yeah, that Marvel Comics Presents series was an Irangate-type story, transposed to Latveria (no Dr Doom though):
Tbh its the Tom Sutton artwork that really makes it worth a look - interesting to see him take a few cues from Steve Bisette and John Totleben's work on Swamp Thing. At least, thats how it seems to me.

-sean

McSCOTTY said...

No offence Sean as far as I'm concerned I am very much European.

I forgot about Man Thing 16 -18 that was a good story and I loved John Buscemas art on issue 16. A great Man-Thing tale, artistically at least was the Roy Thomas, Gray Morrow tale in Monsters Unleashed (issue 1) and the Neal Adams black white and yellow tale that was inserted into a KaZar tale from Astonishing Tales.

Colin Jones said...

Sean, Mount Rushmore did appear in those Ploog apes stories (collectively known as "Terror On The Planet Of The Apes") but the giant brains lived in an underground cavern in the Forbidden Zone.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Colin - I knew those giant brains in fishtanks were inside somewhere!

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean:
I was just flipping thru the MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS serial — in addition to Bissette/Totleben influence, I’m picking up some serious David Cronenberg / Stuart Gordon / KNB Studios ‘Body Horror’ vibes too. Plus a stacked dominatrix and a Jazzercize gal in leg warmers — it’s all VERY ‘Late 80s’. I’m gonna try to actually read this one sooner than later.

b.t.