Sunday 20 November 2022

2000 AD - October 1984.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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I said I'd be back.

And I am.

But I'm not the only one.

Because we're about to dive into October 1984, and that month's cinematic claim to fame is it was then that The Terminator first smashed, drove and exploded his way into our cinemas. How we gasped as he chased Sarah Connor around for 100 minutes and then got squashed.

But he wasn't the only mechanical marvel making his debut. For, verily, it was also the month in which the first episode of Thomas the Tank Engine hit our TV screens.

Thomas or Terminator? Who'd win a fight between the pair?

Sadly, we shall never know, as it seems Hollywood will never get round to making the meeting we all demand.

But, speaking of things that can't be done without the aid of technology, October was the month in which Kathryn D Sullivan became the first American woman to perform a spacewalk, thanks to the Space Shuttle Challenger.

Things, however, were far less rosy on the planet below, as the BBC's Michael Buerk told us all of a famine in Ethiopia which threatened to kill up to ten million people.

Matters of life and death were also hitting India, as its Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her two Sikh security guards, sparking anti-Sikh riots that left 10-20,000 dead in Delhi and surrounding areas.

When it came to the UK singles chart, just two records ruled the roost, that month. They were Stevie Wonder's seemingly interminable I Just Called to Say I Love You which then, finally, lost its top spot to Freedom by Wham!

Over on the British album chart, it was U2's 
The Unforgettable Fire that reigned supreme at the month's inception. That was then deposed by Big Country's Steeltown before that too was deposed by Paul McCartney's Give My Regards to Broad Street. That album proving to be more successful than the movie that spawned it.

But what of the galaxy's greatest comic? Could it match the drama of all those real-world events?

I've no doubt it made a serious stab at it, thanks to strips involving Judge Dredd, Nemesis the Warlock, Ace Trucking Co, Rogue Trooper and Tharg's Future-Shocks.

But of most interest was a brand new strip called The Hell Trekkers starring someone called Banjo Quint and brought to us by Alan Grant, John Wagner and Horacio Lalia. Tragically, I possess no recollection of it and, so, can offer no opinions on whether it was an offering that was worth the read.

2000 AD #386, Tharg and the Judges

2000 AD #387, Nemesis the Warlock

2000 AD #388, Rogue Trooper

2000 AD #389, Judge Dredd

11 comments:

Matthew McKinnon said...

Ah!
‘A Case For Treatment’ was a really good Dredd story - one of the first to seriously consider the toll his job might take on what’s left of his soul. I’ll have to dig the reprint out tonight.

Some repurposed Kev O’Neill (RIP - you were a legend) artwork for two episodes of Nemesis, in the old metallic style because they were done way back in 1980. Then it’s Bryan Talbot for many years.

Obviously the Nemesis is the best cover by many many miles.

Hell Trekkers… dunno. I just Googled it and I reckon I wouldn’t even have read it back then. Looks like a filler strip. I wonder if it lasted its whole run?

Anonymous said...

Hell Trekkers was set in the Cursed Earth, Steve, a spin off created for a proposed Dredd mag that didn't end up happening around that time.

Obviously it wasn't in the same class as Nemesis or Halo Jones, but I don't know that I'd call it filler necessarily. It was just average 2000AD for the time - I mean, it was no worse than Rogue Trooper or (yikes!) Ace Trucking. Probably the use of Spanish artists - picking up the slack from Brits going to DC? - made it seem a bit more 'old skool IPC boys comic' than most of what had been in then recent progs.

But as with most of those guys, Horacio Lalia - probably best known round these parts, if at all, for drawing The Running Man in Action - did pretty good work. Hardly surprising really, as like fellow IPC 'Spanish' artist Solano Lopez (of Janus Stark and Kelly's Eye fame) he was actually from Argentina - in exile to avoid 'disappearing' under the fascists - and had been part of the crowd around Alberto Breccia and Hugo Pratt (who'd lived in Buenos Aires for a while).

Anyhow, obviously the return of the mighty Kevin O'Neill is a highlight this month. As was the arrival of Bryan Talbot - it was great to see the fella behind the Adventures of Luther Arkwright turn up in the progs...

-sean

Anonymous said...

I must have been on another toothy break as I don't remember these (and would have recalled the transition from O'Neil to Talbot). I'm wondering if my anti Ace Trucking position now overruled my two-story theory. I do remember watching Terminator on (possibly dodgy) VHS and thinking it was great. Didn't mind Wham's Freedom (I'll kid myself, in an ironic way) and really liked Unforgettable Fire. Also, the brilliant Hatful of Hollow was released this month and so an overall great time to be lower sixth DW.

DW

Anonymous said...

Never mind that U2 bollocks and the Smiths, the real hit of the October '84 was 'Strike' by The Enemy Within (all proceeds to the miners).
www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMugk_ntcKY

It was basically by New York drummer Keith LeBlanc who'd previously done one of the first big sample-based records 'No Sell Out' -
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ueo_-Te4uzs
A bit surprising to follow up Malcolm X with Arthur Scargill really, but kinda cool. I guess?

Also somewhat surprising the miners' strike doesn't seem to have been mentioned in this feature yet Steve. I was under the impression South Yorkshire was ground zero of the class struggle for most of '84...

-sean

Anonymous said...

Kind of ironic that, compared to today's environmental concerns, back in the 80s, the kids and the cool people were all protesting for the right to burn fossil fuel...

DW

Anonymous said...

You sound a bit like Boris Johnson claiming Thatcher was the first green prime minister there, DW (;

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Escaping Franco's Spain to live under Argentina's military junta doesn't sound like a good move!

Colin Jones said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

No, it was the other way found Colin - the artists went to Europe from Argentina. Living in Spain wasn't a problem for them by '75, when Franco bit the dust. I think before that they might have lived in London (Solano Lopez - who was all over the IPC weeklies - did for a while at least).

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Has anyone else seen Cliff Richard's 'Sleigh Ride' video which includes a bit of 'Congratulations'? Cliff is still going at the age of 82.

Steve W. said...

I haven't seen it, Colin. I shall have to see if I can catch it later tonight.