Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Carlos Pino. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Carlos Pino. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 9 tháng 9, 2015

Four Commando comics out today

Here's the info on the four issues of Commando that will be in the shops today. Thanks to D.C. Thomson for the press release...


Commando Issues 4843-4846 On Sale 10th September 2015

Commando No 4843 – Peterloo!
Thomas Hatfield decided that a farmer’s life wasn’t him and decided to join his local regiment, the Lancashire Light Foot.
   Soon he was plunged into the tumultuous events of the Napoleonic Wars. He was sickened by the villainy of a crooked sergeant and his cronies, in addition to the threat from the opposing French army at the battle of Waterloo. 
   After massacre at St. Peter’s Field, Manchester — which became known as ‘Peterloo’ — the young man wondered if a life in England was what he really wanted…

Introduction
200 years ago, the battle that — arguably if you’re French — set the political landscape of Europe for many generations was fought in a previously insignificant area of what was then the Netherlands. Waterloo.
   Waterloo! (Issue no 4823) told a fictional — as we always do — tale of that epic history-defining battle, focussing mainly on the French perspective of the ordinary soldiers embroiled in the heat of the fighting.
   Regular Commando author Ferg Handley wrote that story, wonderfully illustrated by veteran artist Carlos Pino. Now, both creators have produced this follow-up, which turns its attention towards the British. Eagle-eyed readers — that’s all of you, we wouldn’t have it any other way — may even have noticed that this book’s hero, Private Thomas Hatfield, and his nemesis, Sergeant Nathan Wilkes, had brief cameo appearances in part one.
   Once again, we believe that Ferg and Carlos have done us proud, and hope that you enjoy this adventure.
Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor

Story: Ferg Handley
Art: Carlos Pino
Cover: Carlos Pino

Commando No 4844 – Hurricane Ace
The huge stone statue of Buddha smiled…
   Beside it on this remote Burmese hillside lay the smoking wreckage of a Japanese transport plane, with an injured general inside, and a complete set of plans for their invasion of India. From every point of the compass Japanese search parties came to hunt for the wreck. And so did Ian Murdoch – a young Hurricane pilot who’d made the biggest mistake of his career in shooting down the Japanese plane instead of forcing it to land at the British base. Now he had only four men and his own luck and courage to make good on his mistake.

Introduction
As is common with many of the books from Commando’s earliest years, this tale is pretty hard-hitting. There’s seems to be something about jungle tales that bring out an extra grittiness to the writing.
   A jungle story, you may well ask?
   Yes. Although Ken Barr’s cover is stunning, it’s perhaps slightly misleading. Apart from the first handful of pages, this adventure takes place firmly on the ground — and in the terrifying heat of the jungle. Hurricane ace is a tough read, yes, but it’s worth it.
Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor

Hurricane Ace, originally Commando No 166 (June 1965), re-issued as No 791 (November 1973)

Story: Henderson
Art: Segrelles
Cover: Ken Barr



Commando No 4845 – Enemies Yesterday…
A veteran of the battle to defend Malta in 1942, Flight Lieutenant Jim Newman remembered barely surviving against Italian Macchi 200 aircraft.
   A couple of years later, when promoted to Squadron Leader in the Balkan Air Force — a multinational unit based in Yugoslavia and fighting the Luftwaffe — the Englishman was less than pleased when some rebel Italian pilots joined their cause.
   Although acknowledging that the Italians were gifted pilots, could Jim truly accept that the enemies of yesterday were now the allies of today?
Story: Steve Taylor
Art: Jaume Forns
Cover: Ian Kennedy



Commando 4846 – Day Of Shame
The other pilots sneered and joked about it…the day of shame when they called Jim Black yellow. But Jim wasn’t laughing, and neither would any other pilot accused of cowardice and kicked out of the squadron.
   He’d just have to prove them wrong, even without an aircraft…

Introduction
Thanks to a series of unlucky events and the manipulation of an unscrupulous supporting character, our hero, Pilot Officer Jim Black, appears far from heroic in the eyes of his C.O. and fellow Hurricane pilots.
   I can only imagine that feeling terrified in the face of constant death and destruction is a completely natural reaction. However, being accused of cowardice must, of course, be one of the worst possible things that could happen to a serviceman during wartime and author C.G Walker’s script certainly highlights this —and since this is Commando, we, as readers, certainly hope our disgraced hero will prove his mettle once and for all.
Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor
Day of Shame, originally Commando No 2367 (April 1990)

Story: C.G. Walker
Art: Terry Patrick
Cover: Ian Kennedy

Thứ Ba, 5 tháng 5, 2015

This week in 1978: STARLORD No.1

Saturday 6th May 1978 saw the publication of IPC's new sci-fi weekly Starlord in newsagents across the UK. The new comic was a companion to 2000AD and was originally planned as a monthly until IPC got cold feet, resulting in some quick changes before launching as a weekly. 

As one IPC editor told me a few years later, monthly comics were considered too risky back then. The concern was that the young target audience who were accustomed to weekly comics would either forget which week a monthly would come out, or even lose interest during the four week wait for the next issue. Of course that attitude changed over the years as UK publishers had to rethink the frequency of their comics in the wake of ever decreasing sales to give them a longer shelf life. These days a monthly frequency is the norm, with weeklies being the oddities.

Anyway, back to Starlord No.1. The 32 page comic was on slicker paper than its sister title 2000AD and boasted more colour and better printing. It was also a few pence more expensive at 12p an issue. What it had in common with 2000AD was its presentation of stories in a dynamic and hyperactive fashion. For example, upon opening issue 1, the reader was immediately plunged into the relentlessly fast-paced Planet of the Damned by 'R.E.Wright' (Pat Mills) and Lalia. Here's the first two pages of the six page first episode which used the then-popular story theme about the 'Bermuda Triangle'...

Next came the first chapter of Time Quake, written by Jack Adrian with fantastic artwork by Ian Kennedy. Here's the first three pages...


Next, time for a breather and for the comic's fictional editor Starlord to introduce himself with art by Ian Gibson and an editorial dripping with paranoia...
The facing page showed the six alternative free badges, one of which was randomly attached by tape to the cover. If the readers weren't already jittery from Starlord's warning of imminent alien invasion the advisory about sticking the badges onto flesh would have completely pushed them over the edge: "you could develop a skin disorder, putting you out of combat"! 
Here's one of those very badges, designed by Kevin O'Neill...
Across the centre pages, the first episode of Strontium Dog, by T.B. Grover (John Wagner) and Carlos Ezquerra. A popular character still around today in the pages of the latest 2000AD. Here's the first two pages...

Rounding off the issue was the longest story, Ro-Busters, running to 11 pages! This was one of the strips originally intended for the monthly, which accounted for its length. Subsequent chapters would be half the size.
Script by Pat Mills, artwork by Carlos Pino. The war robot Hammerstein still appears today in 2000AD's A.B.C. Warriors and Savage strips, with Pat Mills having connected several of his series into one universe. 
Starlord wasn't a big success for IPC and sadly ended after 22 weeks, merging into 2000AD. Apparently 2000AD's sales were not good either, but it's thought that Starlord was sacrificed because it was more expensive to produce. On a positive note, the merger did 2000AD a lot of good, bringing in Ro-Busters and Strontium Dog which strengthened the comic.

***************
While I'm at it, here are the covers to issues 2 and 3, plus the free gifts. No.2 was drawn by Brian Bolland, relating to the Time Quake story inside...


...and No.3 sported a fantastic cover by Kevin O'Neill...

The free gift in No.2 was the 'Space Calculator', a cardboard slide which gave information on the planets of our galaxy. No.3's freebie was a 'Starblast' game; a variation of 'Battleships', with a wipe-clean laminated card that could be re-used. 
For more information on the background of Starlord comic, check out the book Thrill-Power Overload by David Bishop and, if you can find a copy, the now-out-of-print Beyond 2000AD from Hibernia Comics.  

Thứ Bảy, 2 tháng 5, 2015

TV21 goes football!

Early 1969 was a period of change for readers of British comics, and not for the better in the opinion of some. Eagle was merged into Lion, Smash! was changed beyond recognition into a traditional adventure comic and then on May 7th 1969 there was this cover. "TV21 goes football...in a big way!" 

Football United starts today! I remember my heart sinking at the sight of this headline. I'd only recently started buying TV21 again and found it to be great escapism compared to most other British comics, partly due to the absence of football. Sport was something you expected to see in Tiger or Lion, but the whole point of TV21 was that it was mostly set 100 years in the future, focused around the universe of Gerry Anderson shows. Admittedly that theme had been compromised considerably several months earlier with the absorption of TV Tornado, but its reinvention as a 'space and spy' comic was acceptable.
I've never been a fan of football so the inclusion of a football feature in TV21 was not only out of place but something I actually disliked and I soon dropped the comic. I suspect I wasn't the only one, as sales on the comic continued to fall, leading to a relaunch as TV21 and Joe 90 a few months later. (See here.)

In retrospect, despite the cover and the new footie feature, it was still business as usual inside so perhaps I over reacted when I stopped buying the comic. Let's take a look at the contents...

Pages 2 and 3 gave us Secret Agent 21, one of the mainstays of TV21. Not based on a TV show but part of the Anderson universe. I always liked Rab Hamilton's art on this...

Captain Scarlet, which at one time had been the cover feature of TV21 for months, had by now been demoted to a three page black and white strip. This week, - seagulls turned into Mysteron agents! Art by Jim Watson...
The Munsters, usually drawn by Paul Trevillion, was this week ghosted by Graham Allen...
Department S was a kind of 1960s X-Files but with rational explanations to the mysteries. Artwork by Carlos Pino...
Thunderbirds still dominated the centre pages with fantastic artwork by Frank Bellamy...

The Saint had two pages, with art by Carlos Pino I think...
Zero X was the only other full colour strip. Stunning artwork by the great Mike Noble, - and what a memorable cliffhanger!

Of course, the ever-present Corgi Model Club News was there on page 19...
The back page had an ad for a new ice lolly plus a half page feature on the fictitious mission to Saturn.  
All in all, it was still a great comic, but I still think the inclusion of football was a mistake and another nail in TV21's coffin that set it on a decline it never recovered from. The following year, TV21 and Joe 90 would big up the sport even more, with regular centrespread football team photos. Presumably they thought that was what the readers wanted, and admittedly kids were losing interest in space exploration so the publishers had to try something. However it didn't seem to halt the fall in sales. Eventually budget cuts would bring in reprints, poorer paper, and with TV21 a pale shadow of its former self it merged into Valiant in 1971. 

Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 3, 2015

Commando Nos.4791 to 4794 out this week

Thanks to DC Thomson, here's the info for this month's first set of Commando comics to hit the shelves on Thursday...


Commando Issues 4791-4794 – On Sale 12th March 2015
Commando No 4791 – The Eagles Strike!
The mid-17th Century would turn out to the most turbulent time in England’s already tempestuous history. In summer 1642, a full-scale civil war erupted between the armies of the Royalist “Cavalier” and the Parliamentary “Roundheads.”
   Even the village of Teverton in the far south-west of Britain was caught up in the strife, and a centuries-old feud between a trio of families was re-ignited by the spark of war. Things looked bleak as Englishmen battled fellow Englishman…

Introduction

With only a few notable exceptions — step forward the Convict Commandos — recurring characters have been rare on the pages of Commando over the last 50-odd years. However we were of the opinion that you, our readers, might like a series which carried the story over more than one issue. With the pen of Ferg Handley recruited to do the writing, we decided that a historical saga spanning many generations would hit the spot.
   Episode Six sees the continuing story of three sets of inter-linked characters move from the 14th Century to the harrowing times of the English Civil War of 1642. In the past, the characters had repelled Norman and Roman invaders. Now they are set to do battle with their fellow countrymen.
   We hope you enjoy this story and the journey to come.

Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor

Story: Ferg Handley
Art: Keith Page
Cover: Keith Page



Commando No 4792 – Call Him Hero
Look how young Sergeant-pilot Jack Sherwood left a Nazi prison camp — on the end of a home-made, twelve-foot vaulting pole!
   And this is only one of a hair-raising series of close shaves Jack survives in this great yarn. Sprinter, weight-lifter, jumper and vaulter, this crack user athlete has to pull out he knows before he gets clear of the Germans to fly — and fight — again.

Introduction

POW stories have always been a bit problematic in Commando. We’ve always tried to have lots of action in our stories so the static setting of a Stalag doesn’t really work. The other thing that’s difficult is having a lone character featuring throughout the tale. Endless pictures of a thoughtful hero can get a bit wearing. And yet, Mr Tyson has used both these themes and made a Commando tale that works very well.
   With Medrano’s inside art and Ken Barr’s slightly misleading cover, this is a rare classic seeing the light of day for the first time in 40 years.

Calum Laird, Commando Editor

Call Him Hero originally Commando No 186 (October 1965), re-issued as No 815 (February 1974)

Story: Tyson
Art: Medrano
Cover: Ken Barr



Commando No 4793 – The Rogue Mission 
The Home Guard never served overseas, did they? And they certainly didn’t take their improvised armoured vehicles to the east of Africa to fight Axis forces, did they? Of course they didn’t.
   Or did they? A bunch of Home Guardsmen from Hecklethwaite might beg to differ, for they know the story of…
The Rogue Mission

Story: Alan Hebden
Art: Carlos Pino
Cover: Carlos Pino




Commando No 4794 – Duel In The Snow 
Climbing dazedly from the shattered cockpit of his hijacked Zero, Pilot Officer Bill O’Hara was relieved to find himself still in one piece.
   But his troubles weren’t over yet. A deadly duel was about to begin on the side of a mountain will Bill, unarmed and exhausted, against a fanatical enemy officer out for revenge!

Introduction

After reading this story, part of me was tempted to go back through the pages and check for any rogue kitchen sinks that I may have missed — as author David Heptonstall seems to have thrown everything else into the mix. Duel In The Snow is a heady brew of aerial dogfights, Commando training, top secret missions, stolen Japanese Zeros and Himalayan mountaineering. 
   I think it’s fair to say that only in Commando can there be so much scope for such a gloriously entertaining, action-packed concoction, brought vividly to life by Ibanez’s stylish art and Ian Kennedy’s typically atmospheric cover.

Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor

Duel In The Snow, originally Commando No 2559 (March 1990), re-issued as No 3455 (November 2006) 

Story: David Heptonstall
Art: Ibanez
Cover: Ian Kennedy

Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 7, 2014

COMMANDO 4723 to 4726 out today!

Issue 4735 cover art by Carlos Pino
My thanks to DC Thomson for the latest info and cover images for the new Commando comics. Here's the details...

Commando Issues 4723-4726 – On Sale July 17th 2014


Commando No 4723 – To Vimy…To Victory?
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.
   Three years later, more and more soldiers were being dragged into the churning stalemate of the Western Front. Men from half a world away from France came to fight over her muddy battlefields,
   This is the story of one of them, Canadian Rick Strang.

Introduction

   As a tribute to those who served during the years 1914-1918 — on the Home Front or at Front Line — Commando has produced a series of stories of characters caught up in the tumult of the First World War. None of them are real people but we’d like to think that the experiences they have will not be a million miles from what actually happened to so many.
   Last month, tanks and flamethrowers were the perils our heroes faced. Now it is the very ground itself — from the mud to the ridge which dominated the battlefield. Added to this the Germans introduced shock troops — the Stormtroopers — who wrought havoc wherever they fought.
   I hope you enjoy this and the other stories in the series as much as we have.

Calum Laird, Commando Editor

The series continues in four weeks with The Miners Of Messines, Commando No 4731

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



Commando No 4724 – Dog Fight!

“Tally-Ho! Bandits!” That was the battle-cry of the British fighter pilot — the words the hunters in Spitfires shouted over their radio telephones when they had spotted German raiders.
   That famous battle-cry meant that a dogfight was only a couple of heart beats away — and there was glory and medals to be won…and death to be faced.
   “Tally-Ho! Bandits!”

Introduction

   I think it’ll be safe to say that most of you reading this will never have flown a Spitfire nor indeed gone to war. So we aren’t in a position to judge how a real pilot in a real dogfight is going to react. However, having read this tale of battles above the ground (and, indeed, on it) you can’t help but feel it has the smack of authenticity and that makes it believable.
   As well as that, though, it’s principally a good story given form by some very harsh black-and-white work by artist Sostres. His high-contrast work suits the black-and-white world that fighter pilots inhabited, where decisions had to be made in an instant…and acted upon.
   The drama starts with Ken Barr’s stricken pilot cover and doesn’t let up until the last page. Just like the real thing.

Calum Laird, Commando Editor

Dog Fight!, originally Commando No 110 (March 1964), re-issued as No 627 (March 1972)

Story: Kellie
Art: Sostres
Cover: Ken Barr



Commando No 4725 – Samurai Ace

“Tally-Ho! Bandits!” These might not have been the exact words on the lips of Lieutenant Azuma Takata’s lips when he threw his Nakajima Ki-43 fighter into a dogfight but the spirit of the warrior within him was exactly the same as that which drove the RAF men whose battle-cry it was.
   What he never imagined that he would have to turn that fighting spirit against his own side to prove he was indeed a…
SAMURAI ACE

Story: George Low
Art: Carlos Pino
Cover: Carlos Pino



Commando No 4726 – Ace Versus Ace

The two pilots were equally matched, both veterans of many vicious battles, both respected as the best in their squadrons.
   But in a duel to the death someone has to be the loser…

Introduction

With Ace Versus Ace we’re straight into a rollicking, classic Commando air story. However — with an apology in advance for this spoiler — things swiftly change tack and then we’re straight into a rollicking, classic Commando desert story! That’s the beauty of our 63-page format — the space to develop and steer a tale into a different direction if need be.
   And, without a doubt, Messrs Gregg, Jorge and Bevan are all on top here with some fine words and pictures for you to enjoy.

Scott Montgomery, Commando Editor

Ace Versus Ace, originally Commando No 2282 (May 1989), re-issued as No 3843 (September 2005)

Story: Bernard Gregg
Art: J.M. Jorge
Cover: Jeff Bevan