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Showing posts with label costume changes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label costume changes. Show all posts

My heart's...a-far...for El-var



The final entry in our series on the Wanderers looks at the clone resurrection version of Elvo.

Elvar's Look and Powers
Where his original look wasn't bad, I have always thought the clone version--notwithstanding the thigh high boots--was an improvement. For one, the original yellow and purple color scheme was pretty garish.  It's difficult to pull that off.  Green and black are much a better combo.

Second--and I realize mileage will vary here--I liked the more elf-like look given Elvar.  I've got to believe that the morphological affinity of "Elvo" with "elf" was part of the inspiration. Elvar combines the tropes of both the snarky elf and the agile sword wielding elf in one character. The former trope is illustrated by other examples like Marvel's villainous Elf with a Gun (introduced in July 1975).


The agility and swordsmanship combo was, of course, well established in fantasy literature.  Interestingly, Elvar's uniting of the elvan swordsman with superhero tropes was aped by Marvel's Excalibur version of Nightcrawler who, seemed to be wielding a saber every time you turned around.  I don't recall that being a part of Nightcrawler's basic depiction prior to Excalibur.  The basic chronology here makes me suspect that Elvar may have inspired the changes in Kurt Wagner. (However, as an admittedly arm's-length reader of both the X-Men and the Excalibur, I realize I may just be ignorant of "the elf's" backstory.  Perhaps some well-versed X-fan can clarify the situation for us?)





Does he look like a refugee from the Dark Crystal?  Sure, but I submit that's still better than looking like a guy with a yellow beach bucket on his head.

The power upgrade made Elvar a bigger asset to the team and just a more interesting character generally.  First, he got enhanced agility. Second there seem to have been some changes in regards to the energy properties of his sword.  As noted in the post on Elvo, however, there's inconsistent information about the precise parameters of those changes.

Aviax


Straining toward a serious raison d'etre that's just out reach...

This week's Wanderer is perhaps the poster-child of how a promising rebirth of 30th century ronin went completely off the rails.

An earlier post discussed the Ornitho.  When "reborn" he chucked this in favor of the name Aviax.  As with Dartalg/Dartalon, I think the rebirth name was an improvement.

The costume, however, is  a different matter.  While Ornitho's original outfit wasn't particularly inspiring, neither was it a trainwreck.  When I was eleven, I thought Aviax's threads were cool...but as I said, I was eleven.  With the wisdom and perspective of age, I gotta admit that Aviax's look has not aged well.  In the first place it just looks a little goony.  (What's the purpose of those giant shoulder wing pads?)  The color scheme is a bit loud.  In addition to the gooniness, the costume is largely dysfunctional.  

Where most of the other Wanderers either got a new costume or a new costume plus power upgrade, Aviax got both...plus a highly-limiting weakness.  While Aviax gained the ability to transform into any type of flying creature he could imagine--in addition to those that actually exist, as he had in his Ornitho form--this came at the cost of having porous hollow bones (like a bird's).

Now when you think about it, that's a pretty serious weakness for a guy who's going to travel around the galaxy fighting.  Furthermore, if you know going in that that's a weakness then would you wear...I don't know...a few more clothes than this?  Maybe some kind of padded armor or something to keep you from constantly having broken bones?

At a more fundamental level, does this weakness even make sense?  Clonus is able to give Re-Animage the ability to resurrect people from the dead, but he couldn't figure out how to clone Aviax in such a way that his bones wouldn't shatter under a strong wind?!

But the greatest fail...the coup de grace of SMH moments came in Wanderers #12 (MAR 1989), when at long last Aviax is able to demonstrate his usefulness to the Wanderers.  In this story, the team is trying to save a planet of dinosaurs from impending extinction due a radiation cloud spreading slowly over the planet.   What's the solution?  Why, to transform into a prehistoric bird and have sex with another prehistoric animal so as to (supposedly) imbue the creatures of the planet with Aviax's own genetic resistance to the radiation.

Yeah.  I'm not makin' it up.  That was actually, a real story as told in a professionally-published comic book. If you want the last vestiges of your illusions shattered, you can read more about this debacle in Brian Cronin's piece for CBR.  But even if you don't, just take a look at the cover for that particular issue.  It'll basically tell you everything you need to know.


And the series was cancelled after the very next issue.  I know...shocking, right?


The "Queenly" Psyche

Once there was an unnamed couple on an unnamed planet who both had "the ability of enhanced empathy" (Comic Vine).  To this enigmatic union was born an unnamed daughter who wound up being even more powerful than her parents, because she could, "control the emotions of others, bending them to her will" (Comic Vine).

Feared by their neighbors, this unnamed family lived in a remote stronghold away from the most populous areas of their unnamed planet.  Until the day when, for some unexplained reason, the recluse young girl's powers came to the attention of the space-faring Wanderers, who recruited said unnamed girl into their ranks with no more rationale given to her parents than, "Look, I just have to...okay?"

And that, dear reader, is the complex and intricately woven backstory to the heroine Psyche,  today's Wanderer of the Week.



While all the resurrected Wanderers received new looks, an interesting thing occurred with Psyche.  Whereas Quantum Queen when from a pretty modest costume to a "feelin'-cute-maybe-I'll-give-up-heroing-and-become-an-exotic-dancer" look:

Original Quantum Queen


Quantum Queen Redivivus
Psyche went from a 60's mini-skirt number to a far more formal-looking outfit.  
Original Psyche

Psyche Redivivus

 I just find it quite ironic that the "queen" wound up looking like a rebellious teenage daughter who thought it'd be cool to strip at the local "gentleman's club," while the gal whose whole power-set is based on emotions and emotionalism wound up looking like the more mature character.

Anywho, let's look briefly at the first issue of the Wanderers.


The Wanderers #1 (JUN 1988)
The beginnings of the Wanderers Redivivus occurred--appropriately enough--in their series.  In this series, it's revealed that the original Wanderers had all been killed and were "resurrected" via the technologies of Clonus, an apparently renegade member of the powerful race known as Controllers.

Recognizing that simply bringing them back in the same form they were originally defeated in, Clonus used his advanced technology to enhance the powers of most of the Wanderers. 

Curiously, however, not all of the Wanderers were returned. This first issue explained that Celebrand's DNA was too degraded for him to be brought back -- though the writers seemed to be trying to leave the door open for a return by explaining even in this first appearance that, "a small fragment" of his DNA was implanted into Immorto/Re-Animage.  






The two faces of the Crimson Avenger (Lee Travis)


The Crimson Avenger has the distinction of being the first masked hero produced by Detective Comics.  His debut came in October 1938 with Detective Comics #20.  While costume changes aren't exactly unprecedented in the superhero genre, they typically represent slight variations on a basic model. (Think, for example, of all the many costume changes the Wasp has had over the years.)

In the case of the Crimson Avenger, however, we see a pretty dramatic style change in either Detective Comics #40 (if you believe Wikipedia) or #44 (if you rely on Dave's Comic Heroes Blog). Unfortunately, as I am unable to access the innards of either of these classic tomes, I can't say definitively which is correct.

Regardless of when the change took place, I've only ever heard one explanation. It's claimed that the Avenger's altered duds were the natural response to popular taste shifting away from costumed vigilantes, and towards superheroes. And so, we went from this:

the more or less original look
to this:
the new look as of Detective Comics #40 (or #44)

While it's certainly possible that this was the rationale motivating the editorial decision, it doesn't make much sense to me.

First, marking a line between "costumed vigilantes" and "superheroes" strikes me as a distinction without a difference.  (Unless one were to define the difference as being violent vs. non-violent, or super-powered vs. non-super-powered individuals.)

Second, it seems to me there were a great many "costumed vigilantes" who remained as popular as the Crimson Avenger, without surrendering the business-attire-influenced look.  For example:

Sandman
Adventure Comics #60 MAR 1941
(though Sandman had
his own costume
change by May of the
next year)
Universal Studios poster
1941


Midnight
Smash Comics #54 AUG 1944

The Spirit
The Spirit #22 AUG 1950


So, essentially, I'm curious if anyone has ever heard an alternative explanation for the costume change; or at least a fuller fleshing out of the standard explanation to account for why it was felt Crimson Avenger had to change, when these other guys clearly didn't.