Champions number 14 opens up with Hercules fighting a
building and it moves along from there. Let me try to explain this a little bit
better, he’s not fighting an actual building; he’s fighting the security system
of the Champions building. It’s gone whack-a-doodle and thinks that everyone
inside Champions HQ is an enemy.
I’m burying the lede here—and I’ll get back to Herc in a
second—which is that the heroes not fighting a building are fighting a new
menace. A guy made up of a hive of thousands upon thousands of bees, a guy who goes
by the name of Swarm. If you’re like me, that sounds awesome. But not
unexpected, because I met Swarm from the cartoons. He was a featured bad guy on
Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends, which also starred Ice Man as an amazing
friend.
The difference between cartoon Swarm and comic book Swarm is
that cartoon Swarm only said, “Swarm, swarm, swarm.” He was like Groot only a
million times less charming. The comic book Swarm can speak more than one word
and actually has some pretty compelling conversations. But he’s also a Nazi
scientist, so he’s probably not a person you’d like to spend a lot of time
talking to.
But on the other hand, he’s a guy made out of bees and he
has gigantic robotic bee drones, so I mean, he’d probably the Secretary for
Defense in this present presidential administration. Fox News would probably
spend a few days convincing everyone that we don’t know the real Swarm and that
if we give him a chance, things will turn out okay. I bet they’d even call him
a “honey of a guy” and those morons on the morning couch show would laugh and laugh
and laugh.
Back to Hercules. As our favorite Greek demigod is battling
the Champions Tower, Ice Man is talking to himself in the mirror. He has a new
costume that looks a lot like his old X-Men costume except it’s light blue and
white and instead of an “X” on the belt, there’s a “C”.
“Soon the whole world’s going to sit up and take notice of
Bobby Drake – the new Ice Man!”
A new costume is cool and all, it’s done wonders for the
Angel, but for Ice Man, I don’t think that it matters that much. Mostly because
no one ever sees it because the Ice Man is covered entirely in ice. He spends about
a page whining about not being taken seriously and how he’s practically the
team mascot and why won’t Darkstar go out with him. Pretty much all the stuff
that a mascot would say, but then he suits up in his new uniform and he’s ready
to take on the world.
At some point, way after the Champions were over, Ice Man
returns to the X-Men and some of the writers decide that he’s an Omega-Level
mutant. This means that he’s one of the most powerful characters in the Marvel
Universe. Professor X, Phoenix, Magneto are all examples of Omega-Level
mutants. The reason is because Ice Man turns water vapors, which surround him
and all of us, into ice. Theoretically, he has the power to completely alter
the ecosystem of the entire planet. In other words, if he wanted to, he could
plunge the Earth into a second Ice Age. Therefore, if he can do that, kicking the
crap out of a guy like Rampage should be no problem.
For Champion-age Ice Man, it’s a huge problem as we will
see.
Ice Man finally notices that Hercules is in some sort of a
bind as a steel girder goes flying past his head. It’s about to crush some
civilians when Bobby “catches” the girder by freezing it mid-air before it
crushes anyone. Like a true hero, he leaves the scene saying, “The Police can
figure out what to do about the ice pylon obstructing the sidewalk.”
Bravo, dude. Bravo.
Darkstar, Black Widow and Ghost Rider are at the docks
saying good bye to BW’s friend Ivan. He’s going back to Russia to patch things
up with his son, Yuri aka the Crimson Dynamo. We haven’t seen Ivan in about four
issues, or eight months real time, so him being written out of the book isn’t a
huge surprise.
Speaking of written, for some reason Ivan’s dialogue is
always Moscow via Columbus, Ohio. He’s like a Soviet Humphrey Bogart. There’s a
lot of dropped g’s and d’s, calls Black Widow and Darkstar either “kid” or “princess”
and uses a lot of old, but very American phrases. Not every Russian has to
sound like Colossus, but most Russian comic characters are written in a very
particular way. When they aren’t written like that, it’s a bit strange.
As Ivan departs up the gangplank, another man is leaving the
boat with a briefcase. All of a sudden, he’s attacked by giant bees. Darkstar
springs into action, which freaks Ghost Rider out. He calls her “woman” and
tells her to stay back with the Black Widow because he can handle this stuff.
Unsurprisingly, this pisses Black Widow off.
“Johnny, I’m beginning to resent your attitude of
superiority towards the women of this team,” she says.
And Black Widow has a point. For a guy who recognizes that
he doesn’t mesh well with his other teammates, Ghost Rider has been acting like
a real dick these last few issues. And I’m not sure why. When Black Widow as
named team leader, I thought that it was going to be Hercules that would have a
problem with it. You can’t get much older than Herc and he’s always thought of
women as primarily damsels in distress; so you can see why that
characterization would be appropriate.
But Johnny Blaze, the Ghost Rider? Why is he a male chauvinist
all of a sudden? There’s nothing that explains why he’s this way. I’m not sure
whether writer Bill Mantlo thinks that he needs to add another layer to GR’s
character, but turning him into a flaming headed Archie Bunker is not the way
to go.
In one panel, GR is stung by one of the giant mechanical bees
and Darkstar destroys the robot so Blaze can get his shit together. Does he
thank her? No. Of course not.
“Blast you,” he says. “I don’t want your help! Stay away
from me!”
Darkstar turns to him and yells, “Why do you hate me so
much?”
And in an inner monologue, Blaze whines about how the Champions
accepted her so quickly while they still fear him. I mean, I can kinda see
where he’s coming from, but he’s still acting like an asshole. Maybe instead of being a jerk, perhaps he could be a nice guy around his fellow Champions? Bring them to dinner, offer to light the Champions' grill, allow them to roast marshmallows off of his head. Chill things like that.
I think that’s
one of the problems with this book, most of these characters are assholes
(except for Hercules, though he can go turbo dickhead at any time). Black Widow
just barks orders, Angel is a rich prick, Ice Man whines and mopes, Ghost Rider
is a chauvinist. Is there anyone you root for here?
The Champions continue to fight the robot bees when all of a
sudden, they fly away. They find the guy who left the boat and he’s dead, his
face completely swollen with bee stings. While the team was dealing with the
robot bee diversion, Swarm popped up and stung the guy in the face about a
thousand times. It’s a pretty brutal way to go, to be honest.
Widow calls Champions HQ tyring to get Hercules and Ice Man
to the scene for back up. They aren’t answering the call because they’re still fighting
the building. Things are going from bad to worse for the duo because not only
has the building’s security system attacked them, but now the Rampage armor has
become sentient and it bashed Bobby in the back of the head. The armor has Ice
Man cornered and is about to punch him when Bobby ducks and the armor hits a
power source, short circuiting the entire building.
According to Ice Man and Hercules’ explanation, it was
faulty wiring. Like the Champscraft debacle from three issues ago, it appears
that the plans were fine, the people who built the thing cut a lot of corners.
Black Widow, Darkstar and Ghost Rider show up to a busted-up
building with zero lights. Instead of asking what happened, BW starts yelling
at the Herc and Icy that they missed a priority alert and better have a good
explanation for doing so. As if on cue, Angel—who has been missing this entire
issue—comes barreling through the window telling his comrades to look out the
window.
Hercules is like, “Dude it’s a storm cloud, chill thy self
out.”
And Angel’s like, no it’s not. Look again! And WWIII is
right, it’s a gigantic swarm of bees coming to destroy Los Angeles. I don’t
want to jump to conclusions here, but I bet Swarm is behind this.
This was an issue that could have only been made in the
1970s. Sometime in the middle of that decade people got really scared of killer
bees. It was a huge thing. And there was a lot of popular culture springing up
talking about killer bees. Movies, TV shows, books and now comics all explored
the possibility of a killer bee attack. Judging this story 40 plus years later,
it’s a bit silly. The waves of killer bee attacks never happened and the
hysteria fell off – I guess people got worked up about shark attacks, thanks to
Jaws. But for a while, bees were public enemy number one.
This issue was fine, I suppose. They finally got around to
tying up the Ivan issue, though there were two Soviet agents in his room, but
other than that, it’s more of the same. The Champions fight something that
probably shouldn’t be a big deal, but it gets stretched out to 20 plus pages.
The characters are still jerks and I’m not sure if they even like each other. I
don’t understand what is keeping these people together.
As far as the cover goes, it's okay. The more that I look at it, the more that I like it and maybe with bees on the brain, it would have affected 1970s readers more. I do like that the Ghost Rider is helping a teammate. That seems nice of him.
On the plus side, there was barely any Angel in this issue.
That’s a bonus!
Two out of five disco-vested Angels.
(Man, I wish I knew about this image before I was using the other ones. This is just great!)
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