Monday, December 3, 2012

Pulp of the Week - Rocketeer: Cargo of Doom



Rocketeer Cargo of Doom


The Rocketeer: Cargo of Doom
Rocketeer created by Dave Stevens
Written by Mark Waid
Art by Chris Samnee
Color by Jordie Bellaire

The miniseries, Rocketeer: Cargo of Doom recently finished its run from IDW Comics and man is this a fun read. This mini-series introduces a new character to the team, Peavy's niece, Sally. She's a spunky teenager with a knack for both flying and mechanics. The story starts when an aircraft inspector is in flight with Sally and he gets a bit fresh and the plane gets in trouble and Cliff has to bail her out.

WARNING - MASSIVE SPOILERS FOLLOW - DO NOT TAKE THE JUMP IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO KNOW - DON'T SAY I DIDN'T WARN YOU!

I enjoyed Cargo of Doom and I am happy the Rocketeer is back! I'll give the graphic novel an 8 out of 10 - very good, but things can get better and I hope they will as IDW continues with new adventures of the Rocketeer!






There are a lot off cool things in this miniseries. For one, Cargo of Doom remembers just who made the rocketpack. Though it never said outright in the comic,  it was changed for the movie. In the great Joe Johnston film the inventor was Howard Hughes - a clever substitution for the one in the Dave Steven's comic - Doc Savage. 

After the scene where Cliff rescues Sally, we go to a ship that is nearing Los Angeles Harbor. One of the crew (a big bullet headed guy named Duggan) asks why the Captain goes easy on one of the other men, a guy named, Guptmann. The Captain says, "...Guptmann's perpetually distracted, I know. Always struggling in his brain, like he's failing to remember something urgent. Well, that's true. But there is a reason for it. A horrifying reason. Guptmann was once captured by the Master's greatest enemy. Do you know what that entails? As he has done with so many others, the Master's enemy spirited Guptmann away to a secret laboratory—and subjected him to surgery. The Master's enemy stole vital portions of Guptmann's identity. Of his free will, his drive. He is Guptmann no longer..."

The reference to the Master is referring of course to John Sunlight and Sunlight's greatest enemy is... Doc Savage.

The story also features creatures returned from Skull Island, which, of course, go amok in Hollywood.

Mark Waid does a nice job writing this story, putting in a new character in Cliff's crew and adding a little conflict between Cliff and Betty. Chris Samnee also does good work with the art, capturing the spirit of the era, and the characters, without copying Dave Steven's style. 

There is more Rocketeer to come and I am looking forward to it.




No comments: