Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Black and White Wednesday: "Superhero!" by Steve Skeates and Tom Sutton

What's happening, Groove-ophiles! Many is the time Ol' Groove has mentioned that Steve Skeates is one of my all-time fave writers, and today's example of Sir Steve's scintillating storytelling skills should make it sufficiently self-evident as to why I so speak! Originally appearing in Eerie #32 (cover-dated March 1971), Skeates' "Superhero!", illustrated by the incredible Tom Sutton, turns our expectations of a superhero on its ear--a decade before guys like Alan Moore made such shenanigans cool. Short though it may be, this titanic tale gives ya plenty to sink your teeth into. Dig it, baby!

7 comments:

  1. Looks like Skeates had some residual anger at Steve Ditko to work out of his system...

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  2. Excellent! This is one of my favorite stories from Eerie. Thanks for posting it.

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  3. "It ain't enough he's foulin' up the caper - he gives lectures too!"

    That's hilarious!Had Skeates been reading Ditko's Mr. A?

    Nice twist too.

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  4. At the risk of being obvious, "Crime Crusher's" rhetoric sounds familiar: "There is good and there is evil! They are opposites! They do not mix! A man cannot be partly evil!"

    Straight out of Mr. A.

    Given that Skeates worked with Ditko at DC in the late sixties, writing this story was probably cathartic for him.

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  5. This could be where Kurt Busiek got his idea for the Batman-like vampire hero the Confessor in ASTRO CITY:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Confessor_%28comics%29

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  6. Nice twist ending--I wasn't expecting it!

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  7. Strange but true: the 1st page of the 1st MOON KNIGHT story in MARVEL SPOTLIGHT (by Doug Moench & Don Perlin) is ver similar in layout to the 1st page of the "Crime Crusher" story. (His costume is B&W, too.)

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