Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Skull The Slayer!


I bought Skull the Slayer off the stands for its entire run. I know I did because I still have them in my collection somewhere. But I don't know that I ever really appreciated the series until this most recent reading a few weeks ago. Marv Wolfman writes how Skull the Slayer was a concept he'd had rolling around in his noggin for several years before it was first published by Marvel. He'd tried to sell a version of this Bermuda Triangle and dinosaur saga to DC but they didn't bite. He was then hired at Marvel and got the green light. Skull almost wasn't "Skull" since Marvel at the time had Kull the Conqueror on the stands but by happenchance the named stuck and it's a good thing too. 


Skull the Slayer number one features a damn fine comic book story. Wolfman's script is lean and witty and the story moves briskly but without a feeling of haste. Steve Gan's artwork is stellar, ideal for this yarn about a disgruntled Vietnam vet and three other folks of varied backgrounds who wind up stranded fighting dinosaurs after getting sucked into a strange phenomena in the infamous Bermuda Triangle. Jim "Skull" Scully ain't your typical hero, in fact he's hardly a hero at all. A Viet Cong prisoner he harbors great hate for his time in Vietnam and that fury ended up in a fracas with his junky brother who wound up dead. Scully is charged with his murder and is being transported on a plane which just happens to also carry Dr. Raymond Corey a disgruntled and disagreeable physicist, Ann Reynolds a secretary fed up with the male attitudes she encountered in her work and elsewhere, and Jeff Turner the son of an overbearing Senator who is seeking to get out from under his father's thumb. These are our four protagonists and in the first issue they are lucky to live. For his part Scully actually kills a T-Rex with his hands and wits and few primitive tools. The cover is by Gil Kane and Al Milgrom. 


The second issue has the quartet captured by cavemen who plan to sacrifice them to their god who turns out to be a long-dead alien. Skull finds a belt the alien is wearing and appropriates it. As it turns out the belt gives Skull super-strength which he needs to put down the cave dwellers as well as defeat an aquatic dinosaur. All of this done with a maximum of whining and bitching on the parts of most all of our heroes. This is a comic which seems intent on having its main characters loathe each other. Steven Gan does another bang-up job on the artwork under a Gil Kane and Tom Palmer cover. 


Marv Wolfman wraps up his run on Skull the Slayer with third issue which is penciled by Steve Gan and inked by Pablo Marcos. The team get some new groovy threads and discover to their dismay that the dinosaurs they've been fighting are actually robots. In fact the entire world they are in seems to be just one era in a whole panoply of different time frames, all of which they can see when they enter a bizarre tower. The story ends with the quartet finding themselves in what seems to be ancient Egypt. 


Steve Englehart replaces Wolfman for one issue and it's a whopper. Sal Buscema assisted by inker Mike Esposito takes over the art chores. In this issue we are introduced to the villain Slitherogue who claims to be the mastermind of the tower of time and the story switches to a Medieval setting with both Merlin and the Black Knight making appearances. The biggest change though is that Englehart kills off the entire supporting cast -- Corey, Reynold, and Turner are all seemingly killed in an effort to change the direction of the series into one of pure science fiction and fantasy with a single protagonist. 


But the next issue brings in Bill Mantlo. Buscema stays with addition of inker Sonny Trinidad and this pair do a great job of evoking the excitement of the Steve Gan issues which already seem so far away. Mantlo came onto the job with the assurance he could once again change up the status quo and thankfully his desire was to put the book back onto its original heading more or less. Corey, Reynolds, and Turner are all zapped back into life and with Skull and the Black Knight take the battle to Slitherogue. By the end we know that the Black Knight is a robot as well as we bids farewell to his new allies who trudge off to new adventures in thus lost land. 


Under a dynamic John Buscema cover Mantlo's return to the original concept continues to an extent when the quartet are drawn into the schemes of Incan warriors. The time tower is demolished and Sliterogue is seemingly killed by the robotic Black Knight. We get several vignettes which show us folks in the modern world plotting and planning to see out the lost folks, but these subplots will come to naught when the book is summarily cancelled a few issues later. Sal and Sonny remain remain on the art chores to great effect. 


Skull and his trio of helpers are caught up in political intrigue in the transplanted Incan city. The High Priest has some serious secrets to reveal to the team, but his underlings are plotting to take over the whole shebang. Skull keeps fighting dinosaurs and the trio of Ann, Jeff and Dr. Corey even show that they too can fight for their own survival . The creative team remains unchanged save for a cover by Ron Wilson. 


In the final issue Skull and his allies find out the secret of the High Priest but it does them But it does them limited good when the Jaguar Priest schemes come to fruition. The team is captured in this swansong story by Mantlo, Buscema, and Trinidad and sporting a Jack Kirby cover. It ends on a mighty cliffhanger but we won't have long to wait. 



Marvel Two-in-One was arguably the best team-up book of all time. Despite my affection for the totally awesome The Brave and the Bold, the truth is Batman was not really a candidate for a team up. The Thing is. He's a public hero who while grumpy enough does engage with others effectively. The stories in MTIO were more organic than those of any of the other team-up books. It was also a place used quite often to tie up loose ends and issue thirty-five and thirty-six were used to put a bow on the Skull the Slayer saga. TheThing flies a plane into the Bermuda Triangle and finds Skull and his allies battling the Incan High Priest and his minions. The Thing and Sully and the rest team up and before you know it the gang has returned to the present day (two years after they left) with the assistance of Mr. Fantastic. The story by Marv Wolfman is brisk, almost too fast as many of the dangling threads of the original saga are just ignored. But better an imperfect ending than none at all I suppose. Scully is arrested but his friends do say they will speak up for him. 



We don't see Jim Scully for many years, not until he shows up in the pages of Quasar as the member of a supernatural fighting team called the "Shock Troop". It seems that alien belt had an effect on Scully and gave him an eerie skeletal appearance. Along with Dr. Druid, the Living Mummy, and others he fights alongside Quasar under the name of the Blazing Skull. Later he fights Captain America. (Neither of these later appearances is included in the Skull the Slayer collection.)Scully will show up a few more times in the Marvel Universe, cured of his strange condition and working as a mercenary. To my knowledge though his dinosaur fighting days are done. 

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2 comments:

  1. Skull was one of my favourite comics and I still think I have most of these issues except the last one that didn’t seem to be distributed to the UK. Interesting that you mentioned that Skull was originally aimed at DC as it never seemed to fit at Marvel and was to me more a DC or even a Charlton type comic. A really good read though and I l really like Gan’s art on the first few issues. Rip I’m not sure if its just me but it’s very hard to see when typing a reply as its all blacked out (I typed this out on my laptop and cut and pasted it in)

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  2. Sigh. Thanks for taking the time to respond. I don't know what has happened to the comments function. I thought and hoped it was only happening on my end, but sadly as you indicate this "black out" situation affects visitors too. I have no idea what the problem is, but it's annoying to say the least.

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