Thursday, February 24, 2022

The Year Of The Sabre!


Let's look at one of the most important publications in comic book history, and one which just happens by the way to feature a compelling "blaxploitation" character and takes it to a new level in a new format, and as it turns out into a new marketplace as well. Comic books were dying off in the Bronze Age as newsstands quit carrying them as profitability became harder and harder to achieve. New ways to meet and engage the dwindling numbers of the comic book consumer were needed and the direct market was fashioned to give publishers new life and to give the fan new comics, and as it turned out comics unlike anything ever seen before. 


The "graphic novel" was just being born and early examples are Contract with God by Will Eisner and Red Tide by Jim Steranko among others. But the one which cracked the code in the new marketplace was a "graphic album" or "comic novel" from a brand-new company named Eclipse. It featured a brand-new hero, one fashioned by two creators at the top of their games. Don McGregor had made his bones on "Panther's Rage" in Jungle Action for Marvel Comics and likewise Paul Gulacy had dazzled one and all with beautiful issues of Master of Kung-Fu. These two talents combined forces and so was born Sabre.

(Regular comic reprinting the first half.)

Sabre was the star of a story titled "Slow Fade of an Endangered Species" and it was a tale of the future. That future was ironically enough February 2020 and now we are at long last finally there and more to see how well this narrative's predictions hold up in the light of brutal reality. The answer is frighteningly well and not so good too.

(Regular comic reprinting the second half.)

The America of this 2020 is one that has suffered from famines leading to epidemics in the shadow of massive radiation leaks creating uninhabitable wastelands and leading to a nation under defacto martial law. (The prediction is pretty dire, and most of it hasn't happened, but we had Trump, so it's a bit of a wash.) In this world is born the first test-tube child, the fatherless and motherless Melissa Siren who is the romantic interest of our black rebel hero known just as Sabre, a man filled with a need for liberty and to fight for that liberty with the aplomb of a vintage Errol Flynn character. 

(10th Anniversary Reprint)

Sabre and Siren are seeking to rescue some villagers who have been taken by deadly mercenaries and are held hostage in some abandoned amusement park against Sabre's arrival and presumed execution. But to say much more would be to ruin a darn good story. Suffice it to say Sabre fights the good fight against baroque villains such as the robotic tiger-faced "Grouse", the black-patched "Blackstar" and most of all the top villain named "Overseer" who hides his gruesome visage, made so by the fact he wants to live in a decaying body made possible by future science. Weird with a cherry on top.


McGregor's story moves at the pace he dictates quite literally with his verbose style leading the reader leisurely through this new world. Once in a while he wears me out, but in this story is seems to work better than usual. (Annette Kawecki, the letterer sure earns her drachmas in this one.) Paul Gulacy's debt to the great Steranko is evident, as he crafts pages which sometimes look like lost parts of a Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD story. But in the end, it all comes together, the whole greater than the sum of the parts and we have if not a masterpiece, a virtuoso performance of the higher order.  


Note: This post originally appeared at Rip Jagger's Other Dojo

Rip Off

2 comments:

  1. I was always on the look out for the Sabre graphic novel back in the day but never saw it then, actually I've still never seen it to this day. Gulacy was on fire at this stage in his career.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I had a ten-year anniversary reprint for many years but was able to snag the original some years past. It's a treat. Paul Gulacy was for a time what we imagined Steranko to become. Maybe not as inventive but his narratives were easier to follow.

      Delete