Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 6, 2014

Commando Nos.4711 to 4714

Four issues of Commando will be in the shops on June 5th. Two brand new 63 page stories plus two classic reprints. My thanks to DC Thomson for the info and cover images....

Commando No 4711 – Firestorm In Flanders

On the morning of the 28 June 1914 two pistol shots fired in a Sarajevo street had plunged the world into war and pitched men of all nations against one another.
   Two years later, pursuing victory at all costs, man’s ingenuity had developed more terrible weapons. Yet the war in the west remained static and soldiers old and young had to face death every day.
   This is the story of one of them, Sergeant Brian Wade.

Story: George Low
Art: Keith Page
Cover: Ian Kennedy


Commando No 4712 – Blood Beach

Four outcasts, four men despised and shunned by their fellow soldiers — because their fame and prowess as boxers kept them safe, far from the front line…
   Here is the story of how one fighting sergeant licked all four “champs” into shape, and showed them that you can’t win wars with your bare fists!

Introduction

The author of this tale, Eric Hebden, joined the Royal Artillery well before the outbreak of WW2, serving right through that conflict in an Army career spanning some 25 years. After he left the service, he took to writing, penning some 130 or so stories for Commando. He wrote for other comics, but we’ll gloss over that. The reason for mentioning these details is to give you a clue that all the books he scripted have an undisputable air of authenticity about them, an atmosphere he transferred from his Army life. It adds an indefinable extra to the story.
   I don’t know about Mr Barr or Snr Cortes’s military service but their cover and inside art certainly do justice to this classic Commando.

Calum Laird, Commando Editor

Blood Beach originally Commando No 143 (December 1964), re-issued as No 723 (March 1973)

Story: Eric Hebden
Art: Cortes
Cover: Ken Barr


Commando No 4713 – Fight – Or Die!

Minutes after Flying Officer Bill Foote bailed out of his damaged Hawker Typhoon over Germany he was a prisoner-of-war. Soon he was on his way to Dunsberg castle — a place like no other Stalag…
   There his captors enjoyed a barbaric sport — in a gladiatorial arena where prisoners fought to the death against a merciless Nazi champion.
   Bill knew that his turn in the arena would come. Soon he must
FIGHT — OR DIE!

Story: David Turner
Art: Morahin
Cover: Janek Matysiak



Commando No 4714 – The Last Big Gun

Jean D’Arton of the Free French Army had watched the giant railway howitzers plummet to destruction and was convinced these devastatingly powerful weapons were out of the war for good.
   Now, though, information from the Resistance suggested that the Germans had salvaged at least one of these titanic guns.
   And with the Allied invasion of France due any day now, Jean just hoped these reports weren’t true.

Introduction

A long time staff artist, Jeff Bevan painted many Commando covers, as well as illustrating for several boys papers and comics. Mr Bevan was the go-to-artist for maritime pics in particular but, like all good illustrators, he was versatile and could do turn his hand to anything. 
   His covers had a fairly offbeat look about them with unusual compositions and colours. Here he has surpassed himself — a lurid, all-encompassing red, and the Railway Gun is almost 3D and practically about to edge its way out of the page. For an action cover, I don’t think you can ask for much more than that.

Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor

The Last Big Gun, originally Commando No 2256 (February 1989), re-issued as No 3740 (August 2004)

Story: David Heptonstall
Art: Ruiz
Cover: Jeff Bevan


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