Tuesday, June 30, 2009

John Byrne's "Next Men"


For one reason or the other,  I didn’t read John Byrne’s NEXT MEN during its initial run back in the early 90’s- after reading both his West Coast Avengers and Namor The Sub Mariner run, I was pretty much overkilled on Byrne, and didn’t feel like taking up what looked like nothing more than a vanity project copying the X-MEN…

Boy, how misguided can a guy get?

It was only after Byrne started up his X-Men: The Hidden Years comic that I felt enthusiastic enough about picking up his NEXT MEN series that was, by then, dead and gone (or, infinitely postponed, according to Byrne) and I was able to buy almost the complete 31 issue run in the $1.00 bins at the local comic store! (at least, all except issue 21 which featured Hellboy)

I really wasn’t sure what to expect when I began reading the strip, but I tell you this: After reading just issue #0, I knew this comic was special. Something about the  characters made me care for them the very first time I laid eyes one them!

We get introduced to the central players, who we later find are living in a virtual world plugged into their subconscious, and it’s only after they’ve woken up in the “real” world, do their powers manifest, shocking them and subsequently overtaking their humanity with its raw power. The team must set out to find “the truth” about themselves all the while dodging government and political enemies, trying to sort out friends from enemies.

One thing I really loved about the Next Men was how GREAT they looked as a group, one scene that really stood out for me was when the gang has been hauled in for mass murder… I remember thinking, wow,this is really a pretty awesome team Byrne’s created here…they’re all fully developed and work SO well together, whether on the battlefield or playing against each other.

This one particular shot says it all, each member’s personality is clearly evident here when they get the “Guilty” verdict handed down to them:

Nathan, the most perceptive of the bunch, is unflinchingly somber, as if to say “Of COURSE they voted against us.”
Danny, the wide-eyed guy who readily trusts people and thinks of himself as a true hero, is shocked at the verdict.
Jasmine, the sensitive one of the group, is both worried and crushed by the news…
Jack, who has overwhelming remorse over the carnage they’ve been involved in, is ashamed of himself, and truly believes he is guilty.
…and Bethany is PISSED AS HELL!!!

Oh How I LOVED Bethany! Tuff and Sassy, she was immediately my favorite member, among all the interesting characters in this strip! (More on her in the following post) In fact, along with Federal Agent Toni Murchenson, I'd say that it's the characters that are the driving force behind the strip WAY MORE than the storyline itself!
Sadly, when the series came to an end, I felt extremely unsatisfied, as far as the story went. Although Byrne stated in the editorial that this was the CONCLUSION of the Next Men story arc, they left so many plotlines and characters’ stories in limbo as to feel abruptly chopped off rather than any kind of real “ending”. I thought, “Wow, that ending was really disappointing”

However…

That night after finishing reading the final comic in a one week marathon of John Byrne Next Men reading, I had this huge, empty feeling in my heart- I MISSED the characters!
It saddened me to sit there not knowing the fates of my now beloved characters. I wanted to see all their problems solved, and I wanted to see them at peace!

Now, part of me knows that even if Byrne DID take up the series again, It probably would’ve unfolded in a different direction than I wanted (I wanted more about the interplay and personalities of the original five members, less of the politics & endless introduction of new characters) and it seemed like the strip was turning its direction more into a story about creating new characters with new super powers & secret agendas than the original five characters even before the series ended…

But, who am I kidding? Good or bad, If Byrne actually decided to get off his duff and restart Next Men up again, I will be the FIRST one to run out and grab a copy! Cause I can’t just have those characters suspended forever in comic limbo- I need to have CLOSURE!

Friday, June 26, 2009

Super-Vixens: Bethany

Though I wasn’t a big reader of John Byrne’s NEXT MEN series while is was being published, when I DID get down to collecting them all and reading them, I LOVED IT to DEATH!

With an original storyline of five super-powered individuals who awaken from a dream world state and are suddenly thrust into the real one, Byrne created these thoughtful and sympathetic characters that you really cared about. And out of all of the so-called “Next Men”, the one that I loved head and shoulders above the rest was the indestructible maiden of might, Bethany.

 I fell in love with Bethany from the very first moment I laid eyes on her, happily chatting with Nathan in the “Greenery” the virtual paradise in their minds, dressing like a beautiful extra in Logan’s Run, though I really can’t explain why she won me over so immediately.

But from the moment she awoke into the “real” world and had to begin dealing with her powers/curse of having a virtually indestructible body, her plight always seemed the most interesting to me: having a completely indestructible body meant long hair, long fingernails, and since even her pigment couldn’t be affected, developing a pale complexion!

  It was great storytelling to see her go from the pretty, optimistic and curious girl talking in the Greenery...
To the cold, bitter and ruthless warrior who grew out of her experience of having to deal with the loss of feeling, the loss of her love, and the helplessness of not being able to save innocents from the hands of truly evil men out in the real world.
There are traces of Susan Storm-Richards in Bethany to be sure, and why not? Byrne was trying to elevate Sue from the crying, wringing-her-hands girl she was in the early comics  to become arguably the strongest member of the Fantastic Four, an ass-kicking beautiful blonde- exactly the prototype for the character Beth became!

Why, there are even similarities in Bethany’s “Hardbody’ cosutme and Susan Storm’s “Hate” outfit from FF #281! AHAHAHA..Byrne shows his S & M Style LOL

PS: Speaking of Behtany’s supposed “Codename” Hardbody, well, I never liked it. In fact, in the comic it was a name thrust upon her by an overzealous fellow member who envisioned them as Comic heroes. I don’t know if Byrne menat Hardbody to stick as her real codename, but since even Bethany didn’t like it, I don’t feel any need to accept it either AHAHAHAHA!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The Harry Hastings Method


When I was in seventh grade back in 1979, we were assigned these glossy English reading books with various short stories to read and then get tested on for vocabulary, comprehension, etc. There was this one story that really made an impression on me, and I remember reading it over and over again throughout that school year.
 The tale in question was a short story by Warner Law called The Harry Hastings Method. It’s a zany story told in the first person of a small-time burglar who breaks into well-to-do peoples homes while they’re at work and takes their clothes and valuables to fence. The tale starts for us when he breaks into the house of one Harry Hastings...

* * * * *AS USUAL, SPOILERS ABOUND!!!* * * * * *

  After breaking into a home and rummaging around, the Burglar discovers that the owner of the house is a TV writer named Harry Hastings. As the burglar himself fancies writing some day, he steals one of Hastings’ scripts as well as his entire wardrobe and typewriter. While testing out the typewriter, he decides to leave a note for the owner:
  The burglar enjoys the loot he has stolen from the Hastings residence, but a few months later, he needs new clothes and decides the time is ripe to hit the writer’s house again. He returns to Harry Hastings' house, and makes way to the bedroom to pilfer more clothes, when he sees a note taped to the closet:
  After the burglar takes the few new suits that are in the closet and is about to leave, he remembers something he wanted to tell Harry Hastings. He locates a new electric typewriter and leaves a new note:

  So four more months go by before the burglar decides it is once again time to update his wardrobe. So he makes his way back to Harry Hastings house, but is put on alert when he sees a note taped to the front door:

  Now, He figures the Hastings could be making whole scenario up, but he knows it is best to not take chances. So he opts to leave for the time being. But when he returns a few days later, the same note is still taped to the door!  So he realizes the note is a fake, and breaks into the house without hesitation. When he gets in, there is another note on the closet door for him:

   After stealing whatever is left of Hastings’ wardrobe, the Burglar starts to feel bad, and decides he should leave Harry Hastings alone. But then a few months later, someone breaks into the BURGLAR’S house and steals all the clothes he’d worked so hard to get! Thus he has no choice but to once again break into the Hastings house to replenish his closet!

  Upon coming to Harry Hastings’ front door, he sees a note taped to the front of it:
  This note gives him pause. Is there really a Puma in there, or is this another one of Harry Hastings’ tricks? After a few minutes of debate, he decides to take the chance that Hastings is lying. He stealthily breaks into the house, and slowly sneaks around, calling out “Kitty, nice Kitty!” After a few minutes, he realizes he is right, and the note is a fake.
When he gets to the bedroom, he sees another note taped to the door:
  Well, the burglar doesn’t believe this for one minute. He  goes right into the room, and of course there is no such electronic device to be found. There is, however, another note taped to the closet door:
  The burglar has to laugh, and takes a sports coat out of the closet. There is only a faint scent of cologne, and the burglar knows the gas doesn’t exist at all! The only thing that gives him pause is that fact that the coat he is now stealing looks exactly like the one he’d stolen before. He chalks it up to coincidence, and happily makes his exit, but when he gets home, he is greeted with an alarming scene. There are three envelopes taped to his front door, numbered 1, 2 and 3. He doesn’t know what to make of it, and begins by opening envelope #1:
  Well, the burglar DOES stop and think about it, and then it hits him: Harry Hastings was the guy who broke into his house and stole back the clothes! How did Hastings find out where he lived? How did he get in, and how did he know that he was robbing his place today? Suddenly, the burglar begins to feel nervous as he opens the second envelope:
The burglar quickly opens the third note, because if Hastings knows about him, the police are probably on their way:
   Well, the burglar is simply flabbergasted! He cannot think of what to believe! So he stands in front of his door and sweats and sweats, and finally comes to the realization: Harry Hastings is finally telling the truth! Besides, he can hear the animal inside making little noises as it moves around. But this is beside the point because the burglar has to get in because all his cash is hidden inside, and he’ll need that before he blows town!
  After  debating for a while, he finally decides to hold up the sports coat and try to fend off the animal, and maybe force it into a closet or room until he can get to his cash. Summoning all of his courage, he bursts into the room with the coat protecting him, and...

No puma jumps out at him. No animal is there at all. But then he looks off in the corner of the room, and Harry Hastings himself is sitting at his desk! The burglar cannot think of anything to say, when Hastings speaks up and asks the shaking burglar:

“Tell me one thing. DID you or did you NOT believe there was a puma in here?”

The burglar thought, then slowly nodded. “Yes Sir. Yes, I really did.”

Then Hastings smiled a big smile and said “Well, thank heaven for that! I was beginning to think I was losing my grip!”

  The story ends with the two of them, the writer and the wanna-be writer, collaborating to start a fanciful burglar deterrent system consisting of  inventive notes posted regularly and cheaply to clients' doors!  I just fell in love with the story, and I told myself that I would go to the school library some time and xerox the story so that I would still have it when inevitably I had to return the textbook to the school. But I never got around to it, and before I knew it, we were handing the books back and school was over! I didn’t realize just how much I would miss that story, but as the months and years went by, I cursed myself for not copying the story when I had the chance!
 I spent many summers rummaging through used bookstores and library book fairs trying to track down that English reading book, but it was tough because not only did I not recall the author of the Harry Hastings Method, over time I’d actually forgotten the name of the school textbook! As my memory got blurred, the chances of me ever finding the book grew slimmer and slimmer!

    It was only years and YEARS later through the advent of the internet that I was able to track down the elusive story. By typing in “The Harry Hastings Method” into every internet search engine I could find, I was eventually rewarded with an entry leading the the website that listed short stories published in Playboy, of all places. But lo and behold, listed right there in the Playboy Genre Fiction Page:

Law, Warner,
--Lincoln's Doctor's Son's Dog, March, 1970.
--The Harry Hastings Method, April, 1971.
--Payoff on Double Zero, October, 1971.

I remember reading the listing and re-reading the listing, hardly daring to believe it was the same story. And if it wasn’t for the fact that the story had such a one-of a kind title, I might have convinced myself it WASN”T the same story. But I had to take the chance!

   For the next few weeks I perused  Ebay diligently, waiting to see if I could find a copy of  the April 1971 Playboy issue up for auction. I quickly realized there were two kinds of sellers when it came to Playboy: the people who sold to collectors and sold them at ridiculous prices, and the used bookstore sellers who sold them as nothing more than old magazines. Finding a dealer such as this, I was able to purchase a copy for less than $5.00! Now all I had to do was cross my fingers that this was the story I had been waiting for!

    A month or so later, my magazine came in, and I have to say I was a little bit anxious flipping through that issue, because if it wasn’t the same story, I don’t know how I would contain my disappointment! But my fears were unfounded, for it was INDEED the story I had been searching for, and I cannot express my happiness sitting down and reading it again, almost 20 years later!! It was just as good as I remembered!

  Thank You, wonderful power of the Internet! Thank You school textbook, Thank You Playboy, and thank you Warner Law for writing this wonderful little short story that had a seventh grader obsessed for over two decades!

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Favorite Songs: "New Romance (It's A Mystery)" by Spider

In the times of Mass Media, the Internet and Itunes, it’s hard to remember a time when you could hear a song on the radio a few times, fall in love with it, and never hear the song again!

   But that’s just how it was back in the day. A song that you loved on the radio might be completely unattainable as far as locating a single, especially if it wasn’t brand new or if it was only a minor hit. Your local record store might have only brought in a few copies of the song, and once it was gone, that was it! All you could do was hope to hear it again on the radio, and if it was a one-hit wonder...well, those chances were slim!

  There were so many songs I can remember loving and never being able to get a copy of the single for my own collection. “Crackerbox Palace” by George Harrison was one, and I remember trying desperately to get a copy of “Sir Duke” by Stevie Wonder, all to no avail!

 Anyway, back in 1980 or so, there was this rocking, poppy song that they would play on the radio every once in a while, and I just loved it. The group was called “Spider”, and the single was a song I believed to be called “It’s A Mystery”, due to it’s catchy refrain. I remember trying to find the 45 at my store, but no luck. Just when I resigned myself to only hearing it on the radio, it seemed to disappear! Suddenly, I never heard the song again!

   Years later, I was with a bunch of school friends, and we were talking about cool songs we liked. I casually mentioned liking a song that no one seemed to know, by a group called Spider, and  began singing “ooh, it’s a mystery, do you know what I’m talking about?” I was quite surprised when one of my friends immediately said “ Yeah, “New Romance”! My sister has their album!” 

 I was instantly hopping around, saying that we HAD to get to his house so that I could tape a copy for myself! Yes, this is back in the days of cassette recording, friends. And so it was for the first time I was able to see the actual vinyl myself!

   Hearing the song again really brought back memories for me! It was just as good as I remembered, and we all listened to it, wondering why this great group never made it big!
  As an adult, I was happy to find they had finally gotten around to releasing their two albums onto a CD, and so without further ado, let us take a listen to the wonderful sounds of SPIDER!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Favorite TV: My Favorite Martian

My first exposure to My Favorite Martian was actually a spin-off type kid’s cartoon that aired in the early seventies under the same name. I was only vaguely aware that this was based on an actual sitcom. Like the Hanna-Barbera cartoon spin-off Jeannie (based off, of course, I Dream Of Jeannie) these were tweaked characters and storylines aimed at kids.

  It wasn’t until the early eighties when NBC started running the original My Favorite Martian television show late at night that I finally got to see what the REAL show was all about, and I was instantly captivated. The first thing that struck me was how YOUNG Bill Bixby was! I was a kid used to seeing Bill change into the Incredible Hulk every week, and to see him as a loveable, klutzy reporter Tim O’Hara was unbelievable! I hadn’t seen Ray Walston in anything before this, but he would always ever after be Uncle Martin to me whenever I saw him later on in movies like Fast Times at Ridgemont High and the Stephen King TV movie The Stand.

   The show’s premise was simple: Martian crashes on Earth, makes friends with a News Reporter, pretends to be said reporter’s long lost uncle until he can get his spaceship fixed, wacky hijinks ensue as they try to keep the secret under wraps, with lots of special effects to help save the day. But it was more than that…
   One of the things that immediately struck me about My Favorite Martian was how much heart the show had. The sitcom balanced zany slapstick with nice, touching scenes, and you really got the feeling that these two guys loved each other just as much as if they were real Uncle and Nephew.

   Then there was Lorelee Brown. Tim’s ditzy Landlady, played by gorgeous Pamela Britton (she of Blondie fame), was a perfect character for the sitcom and a great balance for the two male lead actors. Like Gladys Kravitz in Bewitched,, she was always around to “accidentally” bump into some Martian shenanigans which they would spend the whole episode trying to “fix”, but unlike Mrs. Kravitz, she was really a lovable neighbor, and the boys adored her.
   In addition, she loosely played a romantic interest in Uncle Martin, and several episodes were based on the chemistry the two had with each other. One of my favorite episodes was Martin and The Eternal Triangle, where a gentleman named Andre attempts to woo Mrs. Brown, and you really find out how much Uncle Martin secretly likes her.

Other episodes I really loved:

"Never Trust a Naked Martian"

Against Uncle Martin’s warnings of not messing around with things he doesn’t understand, Tim touches Uncle Martin’s antennae, and slips into Limbo.
   Hilarious Moment: Uncle Martin can only see Tim through a mirror, but when Mrs. Brown passes by the mirror, she sees Tim's image, so he freezes and pretends he’s a picture.

"Gone But Not Forgotten"

Uncle Martin gets a sliver of his antennae in his finger, causing everything he touches to disappear. Rather than have to explain why the furniture is invisible, they hide it and pretend they’ve been robbed!
  Hilarious Moment:  Tim and Martin taking out the invisible furniture as a delighted Mrs. Brown watches…she thinks they’re doing charades!

"Three To Make Ready"

 Part of Uncle Martin wants to return to Mars. Part of him wants to stay. And part of him is undecided. So Martin splits himself into three so he can rationally discuss it with himself. Of course trouble is bound to happen when they have to explain THREE Uncle Martins!
  Hilarious Moment: Tim tossing and turning in his sleep, mumbling : “This Uncle Martin went to market.. this Uncle Martin stayed home. This Uncle Martin had roast beef… and that’s all the Uncle Martins there are…….AND THAT”S PLENTY!”

"How Are Things in Glocca Martin?"

 Tim’s long lost Uncle Seamus crashes in, and upon witnessing Martin doing some Martian-ish activities, believes Uncle Martin to be a…Leprechaun!
  Hilarious Moment…, Ah geez, too many to pick from, but I do love the ending teaser dialog: Tim (laughing): “Imagine in this day and age two grown up people actually believing that you were a  Leprechaun?” Martin: “I wouldn’t laugh, Tim…YOU believe I’m a Martian!” Then he turns slowly to the camera and winks!

   The My Favorite Martian series ran for three seasons, two seasons in black and white, and one season in color.
Bill Bixby went on to The Courtship of Eddie’s Father, The Magician and of course The Incredible Hulk. Pamela Britton and Ray Walston even made guest appearances on some of Bill’s shows as well- Pam in The Magician, and Ray in The Incredible Hulk!