Sunday, November 12, 2017
The Savage Kane!
It's possible that Gil Kane is underrated. That seems impossible given the adulation he's gotten for his important work on Silver Age classics like Green Lantern and The Atom and lesser known Atomic Age efforts like Rex the Wonder Dog, but it's still likely that Kane is still seen pretty much as an artist. Not unlike Jack Kirby, Kane was an artist who was bristling to break out of the confines of the ghetto of comic book production and takes his skills to new markets and larger audiences. To that end he produced two important contributions to comics lore -- His Name Is...Savage and Blackmark. Today we look at the former.
His Name Is...Savage was a magazine, not a comic. In the style of Warren Publications, this was an attempt to tap into a more adult audience, one not drawn to the spinner rack, but the newsstand proper. To that end the single issue has a very odd appearance with a painted rendering of the title character looking exactly like actor Lee Marvin.
That's largely because the pitch for His Name Is...Savage involved Lee Marvin to no small degree. According to what I've read Gil Kane was much impressed by Marvin's movie Point Blank, a rugged and rather bizarre adaptation of the hard-nosed crime novel The Hunter by Richard Stark (Donald Westlake). This movie tells of a rugged robber named Walker who is betrayed and left for dead by his wife and partner and spends pretty much the rest of the movie trying to get back what he's lost, which as we all already know is not possible. Walker as presented by Marvin is dangerous and cruel. It's no-holds-barred violence that Kane wanted to portray on the page. To read fuller review and a look at the later remakes of this classic go here.
In a story entitled "Return of the Half-Man" Kane tells the story of an agent who is activated to foil the plot of a deranged former general named Mace, who is the half-man of the story's title. Mace was in an explosion and much of him is now machinery. It's against this quasi-science fiction background that the noir-inspired Savage operates. He has a history with Mace and the government feels only he can penetrate the organization and forestall its plan to assassinate the President of the United States. We see Savage kick in teeth and kill with brutal intensity as he follows the menace to its dangerous core. Archie Goodwin was tapped by Kane to write the script to accompany his art and the words as well as the pictures move in concert to a fatal finale which is worthy of the set-up. To read this classic go here.
But His Name Is...Savage was by reports a sales failure and no further installments were forthcoming. Fantagraphics reprinted the magazine with a more polished type in 1982. In 1986 in an issue of Anything Goes from Fantagraphics Kane returns to give us a silent vignette featuring Savage. It's a mere glimmer of an adventure and while well crafted is only a coda to the one and only Savage story published for the first time so many years before.
Gil Kane was an artist, with a style and panache unlike any other, but he aspired to be more. It's a shame for the industry that he could not achieve his goal in any lasting way.
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Kane was breaking out in more ways than one during this period. His work on Green Lantern morphed from a stately, one might say stodgy, Silver Age approach, to one of tension and heightened emotion. He also began to write a lot of his own material, playing to his visceral needs, for DC and Tower, and he moved dangerously towards the cathartic violence that characterizes Savage. The issues of Captain Action he wrote are glowing with overheated tragedy and agony; the issue of Hawk and Dove where the non-violent Dove loses control and beats a killer senseless is just psychopathic. It's hard to covey the effect that Savage had on fandom (and some professionals, who felt threatened) at the time. The violence that had been so long suppressed in comics was exhilarating to see, and also somewhat frightening.
ReplyDeleteI touch on both the Captain Action series and the Hawk and Dove books in posts later this week. Kane is an undervalued contributor to the nature of comics, he deserves more attention. He's getting some in the most recent issue of Alter Ego.
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The work on His Name is...Savage is some of Kane's best. I think of Gil Kane as belonging to the school of Burne Hogarth in that they came up with a solid alphabet of figurative work that does not really stray from the basics they had developed but that is always reliable. With Kane, we get a lot of the same angles, but his forms are so tight.
ReplyDeleteYou put it well. The figures have a startling regularity, not really uncommon in artists that had to work at a good clip, and it's the novel way Kane made use of his visual notes that made the story click.
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