The Rocketeer by Dave Stevens has been collected in various formats over the course of several decades since its debut from Pacific Comics. What does it mean to read The Rocketeer in its original format. It means to dig up or locate eight different comic books published by four different publishers over the course of thirteen years from 1982 until the final original Dave Stevens' installment in 1995. Let's review.
It's clear to anyone reading the series that it pays homage to those enthralling serials form the 1940's and 1950's starring Rocketman or as he'd also come to be known -- Commando Cody.
The third issue of Starslayer also delivers the second chapter of Rocketeer and see Cliff use the rocket pack to save people at an air show. Then we meet some thugs and others who want the jet pack, but Cliff is not so quick to give up this gift from the gods. Especially if it means he can impress his best girl. That girl was based on 1950's burlesque queen Bettie Page and the living model was Brinke Stevens, Dave's own wife. According to sources, these two chapters were supposed to be all there was. But Rocketeer had proved immensely popular, and the pressure was on to create more. The only problem was that as good as Dave Stevens was, he was also that meticulous and slow.
Then all of sudden the story stopped.
And Eclipse then collects this first story in a great album. It's freshened up with new colors and Harlan Ellison adds his name to package. The story though ends on somewhat of an odd note with Betty and Cliff both headed to New York City separately. It's not as neatly tied up as us devoted readers would like. I certainly didn't think this was the end.
Eventually in 1988, Comico steps in and publishes two issues of The Rocketeer Aventure Magazine offering up the lushest Dave Stevens artwork yet on Cliff's journey to NYC and how he meets up with an old pal and dives headlong into a mystery that delves into his past with a very bizarre carnival. A series of murders committed by a guy who looks like famous movie villain Rondo Hatton put Cliff in great danger, but he's saved by a most mysterious fellow he met at the Cobalt Club, another pulp hero it seems. All this and he wants to win back Betty's love to boot.
Then after two issues it stopped.
Then after two issues it stopped.
While we're waiting for the next Dave Stevens story, a movie happens. Disney (under its Touchstone brand) picked up the character and made a rather handsome cinematic version in 1991 which produced a decent showing in the marketplace and yielded a number of tie-in products such as a film adaptation by Russ Heath and a 3-D comic book by Neal Adams among other things such as a video game from Bandei and collector cards and suchlike. Critical attention was cool, but I've always liked this very faithful adaptation of the comic.
But where was the comic?
And once The Rocketeer found its way to IDW Publishing many years later, we were treated to the classic yarn in a raft of formats and special editions.
And that's the saga. No more Rocketeer tales would be told with the guidance or approval of Dave Stevens aside from the movie and its two adaptations. That's a long time to wait for such a story, no matter its wonderful art to unfold. With the untimely death of Dave Stevens in 2008, it seemed unlikely there would be any more Rocketeer tales.
But there were. More on that anon.
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But there were. More on that anon.
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It took me over 20 years to track down that 1995 third and last issue in order to 'complete' the set. My first exposure to the character was in Pacific Presents #1 back in the '80s so I haven't bothered to obtain the Starslayer issues, as the episodes are included in my collected editions. As my late pal Moonmando said in regard to Dave Stevens in a comment on my post about The Rocketeer, "Amazing talent." Too true!
ReplyDeleteHis presentations of human movement are so natural and identifiable, it makes it easy to fall into the story as a reader. He apparently labored over his pages, but they don't show it. They seem to have just flowed out of his pen.
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