First off, cool title. I think it’s magnificently dorky. That’s
the good news.
The bad news, aside from the art and a few cool moments,
this book is a bit of a mess. We open with the Stilt-Man and Black Goliath are
trading fists over Los Angeles. The Champions are coming back from last issue’s
adventure with the Warlord Kaa.
Black Widow is driving so the rest of her teammates (Ghost
Rider, Hercules, Angel, Ice Man and Dark Star) all get out and lend Black
Goliath a hand. Go back and count how many heroes it takes to knock the
Stilt-Man down. Stop, I’ll do it for you; it’s six. Six heroes (including one
with Class 100 strength) to beat up a C-level villain that is normally laughed
at by literally everyone.
(This is the Stilt-Man. Terrifying, isn't he?)
Aside from being really tall, Stilt-Man has a gun called the
Z-Ray, which he proceeds to drop four panels into the story. Darkstar envelopes
that thing into her Dark Force power and crushes it. So now, Stilt-Man is just
a tall guy. Advantage Champions? You would think, but no.
Ice Man tries to put ice under the Stilt-Man’s stilts. It
does nothing. Hercules knocks him over, but as the Stilt-Man (I love his name,
BTW) lays on the ground, he telescopes his legs out donkey kicking Hercules AND
Black Goliath. The Angel is like, I’m going down to kick his ass but Stilt-Man
knocks him out of the sky with literally one punch. This was after being yelled
at by Black Widow not to get too over confident.
The Ghost Rider takes a shot and rains hell fire. The
Stilt-Man is like, eff this and takes off. Black Goliath tells the team that he’s
going after them, so they should all go inside.
That’s where they meet Reggie Clayborne. It turns out that
the Stilt-Man wanted a box that she had, but she didn’t want to give it to him because
she thought it was bad. Reggie is an African American woman (stay with me, because
this is kind of important to the point I’m going to make) and she tells the
Champions about what’s in this McGuffin.
Turns out her “old man” Jerry was into drugs (of course he
was) and he got “his-self messed up with a bunch of … well, gangsters, to get
money, y’know? Anyway, he done stole this box from Stark International! I tol’
him to take it back, an’ I walked out on him when he wouldn’t! … An’ then I
remembered hearin’ about the Champions on the TV. How you help the ‘Common Man’
an’, well I’m common, an’ I need help!”
First off, ugh. Secondly, from all accounts writer Bill
Mantlo is a really nice guy, but he has to widen his social circle if he thinks
that all black people talk like bit characters from “Good Times”. I mean, “he
done stole”? C’mon man, that’s terrible writing. And way to boil down everyone to
a stereotype: her boyfriend not only is into drugs, but he also steals. And he
steals so indiscriminately that he takes something he has no idea what it is
from Tony Stark. Alright. Sure. Fine. Let’s move this piece of shit along.
As if on cue, the cosmic entity known as the Stranger shows
up. He’s like, I need that box because there’s a bomb in it. The Champions don’t
even stop for a second to wonder whether this guy is telling the truth, they just
start unloading on him.
Everyone except for Ghost Rider, because he’s still stuck as
Johnny Blaze. Apparently Blaze can only turn into GR when there’s danger
present—it’s kind of like his Spidey sense. The Stranger isn’t setting off any
danger alarms, so he tries telling Ice Man that. Blaze starts to tell Bobby,
but all Ice Man can say is, “Shut up Blaze! This big weirdo messed with a lady
I like!”
Really? Fuck you, dude. Number one the lady that you like,
Darkstar, a. doesn’t like you and b. started fighting the Stranger within
seconds of him showing up. So he retaliated. Kind of sucks, but your “lady”
shot first, Greedo. This is also not the first time that Ice Man is disgustingly
hitting on Dark Star while they’re in the midst of a battle. Relax man, what is
your deal. Wait until the fight is over before you start draping your icy
meathooks all over her. Gross.
So Ice Man is being a dick to Ghost Rider. While they were
fighting Stilt-Man, Black Widow warns Angel not to go into battle too over
confidently. He responds by essentially telling her to get off his back, he’s
done this a long time and blah, blah, blah. He gets his ass handed to him,
really quick. So good job listening to your team leader, Warren.
By the way, Black Widow hasn’t done a hell of a lot of
fighting during the last few issues. She’s either shouting vague orders,
driving the Champion Car or hanging around in the background. I don’t think
Mantlo had a plan for her yet.
Back to the fight, Ghost Rider tries going toe-to-toe with
the Stranger who is like, forget this crap and just chucks GR out of 15-story
window. Darkstar saves him before he snaps his neck and is Johnny Blaze happy?
Nope. He accuses her of saving him because she’s a spy and she’s trying to get
all of the Champions’ secrets. Darkstar is acting as a proxy for the audience
because we’re all like what the fuck are you talking about, Johnny?
Black Widow is not too keen on Darkstar either. She’s a bit
concerned as to how easy the team took her country woman in. It reads like she’s
jealous, but that’s kind of dumb. Well, it should be dumb – but we just saw how
stupid Mantlo managed to make a black woman sound. So it wouldn’t be surprising
if he thought that the first emotion a woman experiences when a new woman joins
a group is jealousy.
As this is going on Reggie’s bomb, called the Null-Life
Bomb, is growing bigger and bigger and bigger. According to the Stranger, it’s
now triggered and it’s going to blow up. Not only will Earth be lost, but the
rest of the universe will be too. The Stranger has seen this before, but some
guy sacrificed his life to stop it. It is implied that that the guy who did
that is Reggie’s boyfriend. At least, that’s how I’m reading it, they never
come out and explicitely say it.
The Stranger says that in order to disarm the bomb, all six
of the Champions have to go inside the Null-Life Bomb and fix it. The book ends
with them inside the bomb, ready to fight whatever comes their way.
I said that there were a few cool moments in this comic.
One of them was the way that Mantlo handled the
Stilt-Man/Black Goliath fight. It was broadcast over the Champion TroubleAlert
TV screen. They trade punches until BG gets fed up, rips off one of the Stilt-Man’s
legs and beats him with it. Once he gets him off the ground, he rips off SM’s
mask and bashes him in the face. It is what should have been done by the six of
these guys in the first half of the book.
We also got another great cover by Dave Cockrum. I know that
when Byrne politicked to get Cockrum off the X-Men, Cockrum still drew covers
and it used to infuriate Byrne. I wonder if the same thing went on here? Byrne
is doing the yeoman’s work of drawing 20+ pages and Cockrum does the covers.
That would probably piss me off too, now that I think about it.
This was a bad comic. Not just for the dialogue but for the
logic of it. Six Champions couldn’t get out of their own way to beat up on a
guy like the fucking Stilt-Man. Anyone can beat up the Stilt-Man, he’s just a
dude who grows tall. Then the Stranger comes into their headquarters and they
fight him to a stand-still. The Stranger. He’s not Galactus, but he’s a pretty
big hitter in the Marvel cosmic universe.
The Stanger is a weird looking guy. He has a stark white pointy mustache, a weird white beard and a red shirt without sleeves, plus a speedo hidden by a towel. He kind of looks like your drunk uncle who forwards racist emails and posts a lot of Breitbart articles on Facebook, commenting, "Makes you think ..." In other words, he doesn't look like he's tough. But he is.
Looks aside, how can the Champions fight the Stranger to a draw and get stymied by the Stilt-Man in the same damn book? That makes zero sense. And I get it,
you need to make the villain appear to be powerful, but not the Stilt-Man. He
gets tall, that’s literally it. If you put him in an Uncle Sam costume, he’d be
like the tenth coolest thing at a fair.
And the constant bickering is getting old. I know that
Marvel loves to make a big deal about how their heroes act like real people, so
sometimes they don’t get along, but do these six jabronis even like each other?
Why are they hanging around with each other at this point? It’s not like the
Fantastic Four where they’re family or the X-Men where they’re classmates. They’re
just a bunch of randoms who all happen to live in Los Angeles.
There is never any time when they seem to genuinely like each other.
I give this two vest-wearing Angels. And that’s being kind.
Next entry, I’m going to get into how the Champions should
be a lot more powerful than how they are written. It’s kind of bullshit, to be
honest.
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