Space Man #2Well this was another interesting one. The space race was in full swing by 1962, with the USSR and the US having both sent men into space the previous year. The one-page filler about bouncing beams seems old hat now, but it must have been amazing at the time to think of the uses for the relatively new satellite technology and how that would revolutionise communications. So what wonders will the main story hold?
[Spoilers ahead]
Well, the art was good and the story had a promising premise, but the storytelling and dialogue let it down in parts. It was interesting that the initial enemy was 'The Great Revolutionary People's Republic'. I assumed this was a veiled reference to China, but I did a quick search to see if that was a term that actually came up anywhere. I found one reference online, in a transcript of a 1966 meeting between government representatives from Albania and North Korea, in which the Albanian delegate said, 'We have, first of all, the support and concrete assistance of the great revolutionary People’s Republic of China'.
However, I was more interested in why they chose China as an antagonist instead of the USSR, as I don't think China was involved in the space race at that time. Dr Google tells me that it was 2003 when China launched its first astronaut into space. But I digress.
In spite of the number of pages given for the story, I found it a little hard to follow in parts due to sketchy detail. I had to reread the couple of pages where Garrak-Axos was first introduced. For a minute, I thought it was the character with the Mongol-like appearance, but then I realised it was someone else. CB+ doesn't seem to have Issue #1 of Space Man, so maybe he was introduced there? More intriguing was that the men knew at once it must be Garrak-Axos after the incredibly detailed (??) drawing of the rocket that Mary drew on the blackboard. Yes, in spite of the advanced technology, the writer apparently couldn't visualise anything more advanced than a blackboard
Ten marks to the writer for including a female character who was undertaking 'preparations to become a space woman'. However, they didn't find anything for her to do except hug her hero boyfriend, lie seductively on a couch while mission plans were being discussed, and occasionally toss in some insightful dialogue such as 'I'd rather die with you than live without you' and 'Will you please lead the way, Ian?' One of my favourites is the following exchange after they had had months to prepare for the mission:
Ian: Well, Johnny, Mary ... We're on our way.
Johnny: I thought this time would never come, Ian. Did you, Mary?
Mary: Perhaps, Johnny. What I really wonder is how long this will take?
Really, Mary? Is that the most important thing you want to know? And why wasn't that covered in all your months of preparation?
The tribe of giants was interesting. Was the thought library a precursor to talking-book services like Audible? And due to the rapid nature of their rescue and departure, did they have time to save the thought archives that they had spent so much time preserving?
Before the expected clinch at the end, Ian says, 'You have been wonderful, Mary. There is no one like you in the whole universe.' Well, she knew how to look sexy in that red spacesuit, but she didn't do anything.
Actually, it's not as bad as I've made out. I enjoyed reading it, but the dialogue deserved a bit of lampooning
The one-page fillers 'Glossary Illustrated' and 'The Modern Space Age' were a strange mix, though the cyborg preceded Dr Who's cybermen, and no doubt cyborgs had appeared in fiction before. (Dr Google tells me that although the term wasn't coined until 1960, the concept had been around in sci-fi for decades.) Also, would someone really fall asleep while reading a newspaper in a centrifuge? I think they'd probably be more likely to throw up.
All-in-all, good art and some interesting concepts, but let down by some of the storytelling and dialogue. And if you're going to include a space woman in your story, please have her do something!
Thanks for these selections, Robb. I enjoyed them.
Cheers
QQ