Celebrating the Unpopular Arts
 

The Greg Hatcher Legacy Files #319: ‘Friday With The Best’

[Lots of corrupted images at the link for this column (from 29 July 2011), but the comments are fun, and it’s always fun to see Greg wax nostalgic about Manhunter. Enjoy!]

Every so often, I get asked to contribute to some sort of online ‘best of’ list. This time it was the folks over at Hooded Utilitarian, who asked me to give them my “Ten Best Comics of All Time.”

Now, I misread it at first, and thought they just wanted my number-one pick. So I wrote a little essay and sent it in. Then I reread the original email and realized I’d screwed up, so I shamefacedly sat down and hammered out a list of nine more. That got tossed into the pool of the other 200-plus comics creators, editors, reviewers, et al who contributed, and the whole thing starts unfolding in August. [Edit: That link is still there, but why Greg linked to it instead of the one with his list on it is beyond me!]

But I hate to throw away anything I write, and I have a hunch my choice for number one won’t place all that high; it’s not Maus or Watchmen, or any of the other usual suspects. Everybody knows about those. I went in a different direction … a personal pick as opposed to an objective, critical one.

So anyway, I’m going to go ahead and run a slightly-expanded version of my original answer, talking about my single favorite comics run of all time, as this week’s column. Enjoy.

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Best comics run of ALL TIME? If you mean just character and story, I’d go with the Archie Goodwin-Walt Simonson Manhunter. [Edit: Duh!]

My favorite run, my favorite character … but NOT my favorite comic.

That was just brilliant. Modern creators are still going back to the stuff there — ninjas, clones, superheroic anti-heroes that are willing to use lethal force.

That’s right, kids. Manhunter was so hardcore he freaked BATMAN out.

Not to mention an approach to the art itself that was twenty years ahead of its time. Look at any original Manhunter page today and Simonson’s layout and lettering doesn’t look dated at all.

This looks standard now, but in 1974 it blew me right out of my chair.

But really I’d take it a step further. I’d add that the comics in which those seven installments appeared, Detective #437-#443, were themselves great comics as well. Manhunter was just a small part of the overall picture.

Simply the best. My favorite comics of all time. [Edit: Greg used only six images, so I skipped issue #438, because the cover is the dullest of all of this run BY FAR.]

Goodwin was writing the Batman lead feature along with Manhunter, and he kept luring guys like Alex Toth and a young Howard Chaykin to illustrate them, alternating with Batman regulars like Jim Aparo and Dick Giordano.

A sample of Alex Toth’s masterful work from Detective #442.

It’s also where you found the original “Night of the Stalker” by Steve Englehart, one of the greatest Batman short stories ever.

Englehart, Amendola, and Giordano knocked it out of the park on this one. [Edit: Greg had four images from the story here, but the Wayback Machine is corrupted and the CBR link only shows one, so one is all we get!]

And in the very next issue, you get “Ghost Mountain Midnight,” the story that caused Doctor K to proclaim this the greatest comic of all time. [Edit: The first two comments on that post are from Chris Sims and Kevin Church. A blast from the past!]

Doctor K opines that the level of awesomeness increases exponentially here because Batman doesn’t just punch the bear — he beats it with a chain and then rides it down a cliff. Hard to argue with that.

Even the format was awesome. Most of the books were in DC’s then-current 100-page format — 20 pages new, 80 pages reprint — and Goodwin, who was also editing, had a really good eye for interesting reprints.

It was the first place I saw Kubert’s Golden Age Hawkman …

Reprinted in Detective #439.

Alex Toth’s Eclipso …

Reprinted in Detective #441.

The origin of the Creeper …

Reprinted in #443.

Not to mention other obscure reprints that were quite a ways off the beaten path for DC, like the Golden Age Doll Man …

Reprinted in #440.

… or “Alias The Spider” by Paul Gustafson.

Reprinted in #441.

It was all great stuff. Often, when I see bloggers or other comics pundits speculating on what a good newsstand superhero format would look like, I always think of the old DC 100-pagers; 20 pages of new content and 80 pages of reprints. That seems to me like a format that would really work well in a digest size for bookstores, and Lord knows both DC and Marvel have the libraries for an effort like that. I do like seeing the 100-page reprint packages we’re getting from DC lately, it’s a fine idea, but they could do even better.

This is a great idea, but the reprint choices are new enough that the customers in comics shops that would be interested probably already have the originals. Why don’t we see these offered to a GENERAL audience, maybe in grocery stores as digests of some kind? [Edit: Once again, only the first image shows up on CBR, so I guessed at the other two!]

The 1970s 100-page era from DC, in general, was an amazing run of good comics from different eras, all conveniently collected together in one place. A great many modern DC strips have paid homage to things that appeared there in one form or another.

STARMAN, especially, seemed to go back to a lot of Golden Age stuff that was reprinted in the 1970s. Here’s the Shade confronting the Spider in THE SHADE miniseries.

And of those generally memorable and exciting books, I think the best expression of the format was Detective, from Archie Goodwin.

So if I have to pick a feature, it’d be Manhunter; but … in my heart of hearts, whenever someone says “Best comics of all time,” I have to own up and tell you that my involuntary first response is “Archie Goodwin’s year on Detective, #437 to #443.”

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And there you have it. Maybe not the greatest comics run of all time, but certainly it’s my favorite comics run of all time.

See you next week.

3 Comments

  1. Jeff Nettleton

    I’ve said it before; the 100-Pg Super Spectaculars, 80-Pg giants, Treasury/Limited Collector’s Editions and Digests were the trade collections of my era. You got so much value for your dollar (or 50 cents) and such a great variety. I ended up collecting a lot of those, from across the DC line, though I could never find DC 100-Pg Super Spectacular #6, nor any of the horror or romance ones (though to be fair, they weren’t high on my list). Superman Family had some gaps, too.

    I will second Manhunter as the single greatest comic story. It has everything you could want in pulp adventure, except maybe sex.

  2. Edo Bosnar

    I have nothing to add to my comments to the original post – yes, Manhunter is as great as Greg described, and the 100-pg and other giant books of the time were truly great packages.
    I’ll just add that to some extent, the Marvel digests published in cooperation with Archie Comics a few years or more back (about which I’ve written at this very site) sort of followed the formula he suggested – newer stuff combined with some really great vintage stories from Marvel’s back catalog. I’m still a bit sad that they apparently weren’t big sellers and were discontinued after less than ten volumes being published.

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