Monday, September 4, 2023

The World's Most Dangerous Game!


Manhunter by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson is among the most treasured comic yarns in my long experience in the form. As Goodwin describes in his introduction to the 1979 reprint, the freedom to create something fresh and unusually lively was a result of two factors. One was that the series appeared in Detective Comics, which at the time was suffering a sales slump and so change was seen as good. And the other was that Manhunter was the back-up piece and so seen instantly as less important overall. So, things could change, and in the Bronze Age changes in the status quo of comics was much ballyhooed but rarely done with total commitment. Here was a hero who could do things other Comics Code approved heroes might not be able to get away with, hidden as he was in the shadows of a dangerous world but also in the back of a familiar comic.


I have bought the Manhunter in nearly all its forms. I picked up several of the chapters in real time as they first appeared and have filled in the gaps since. I've picked up the 1984 DC reprint, the 1999 reprint titled Manhunter: The Special Edition which hard on the sad news of Archie Goodwin's untimely death offered a new chapter, wordless but no less important to the core saga. I more recently picked up the story in a collection of Archie Goodwin's best DC stories, and I even popped for the magnificent "Artist's Edition" which showcases Simonson's tasty pages in their full black and white glory. I don't have the very first reprint from an outfit called "Excalibur Enterprises" called Manhunter: The Complete Saga, but beyond that I think I have them all and just included the new "Deluxe Edition" from DC. I love this little saga, I loved it then and I love it still. I am not alone. 


The story taps so many of the pop-culture vibes of the era, with a Golden Age hero named Paul Kirk who has grown disillusioned and then dies in a tragic accident. He is revived by a cabal of evil men who seek to use him and his genetic make-up to help them conquer the world. He turns against these men and turns his back on power and immortality to recapture that which they seem to have stolen from him, his fundamental sense of self and his basic human need to shape his own destiny as much as he can. 


The notion to connect Manhunter directly to the vintage Golden Age hero of that named made most famous by the Simon and Kirby team was brilliant. Ironically though the Goodwin-Simonson Manhunter has been reprinted numerous times, the Simon and Kirby Manhunter tales have never been collected though they'd fit neatly into a single slim tome. It's an oversight on DC's part for certain. We've gotten good reprints of the Boy Commandos, the Newsboy Legion, and Sandman, but for some unknown reason no similar package for Manhunter. 


I first noticed something different about the writing of Archie Goodwin in his early Iron Man issues back in the late 60's when fresh from Warren he dabbled a bit for Stan "The Man". There was a deceptive simplicity to his writing that though it felt like it had not personal style was in fact rich with and inviting for that very reason. When he took the editor's seat at Detective Comics, I took notice and could feel that a more adult approach was evident in both the lead feature and the back-up. 


And then there's Walt Simonson who made his bones on Manhunter, a quick little series that lasted only a brief time but brought many awards and critical recognition to its makers. Simonson did not waste the heft the series gave him and went on to become a significant force in comics of the era. Reading Manhunter in various formats is like listening to a great piece of music in different performances, the greatness is always evident regardless. 


If they sell Manhunter again, I likely will buy it all over -- the music is so very, very sweet. 

Below are the splash pages for the series and the covers of the Detective Comics issues in which they appeared. All but one of the Manhunter chapters was in a 100-Page comic and those were absolute troves of wonderful stories from across the decades. Maybe that richness added to my ardor for the series. I don't know. 
















The inventiveness of Simonson's pages is remarkable and reminds me of Will Eisner's delightful Spirit splashes and he was just getting started. Three of the seven Manhunter stories won Shazam awards (Chapters 1, 5 and the finale) and garnered best writer awards for Goodwin in 1973 and 1974. This series is so good that it has withstood all of the reboots by DC over the intervening decades. A remarkable saga indeed. Goodwin and Simonson returned to the character in the late 90's but before Goodwin could script the final pages by Simonson he passed away. Simonson refused to have anyone else write the story and it was published without dialogue of any kind. The storytelling is so keen that none is needed. The collection which featured this final new Manhunter tale also won awards. 

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8 comments:

  1. I've got all the Detective Comics issues wherein he first appeared as well as the first two collected 'editions', but I didn't realise there had been quite so many more since then. I may have to add a 'deluxe' edition to my collection. Great stuff.

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    1. The pages are a bit larger which helps Simonson's work show up. He was trying to fit so much into those tiny panels because he had so few pages, it's good to have it in a larger format.

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  2. Even though sales might have been slumping, I had really just started getting back into Batman. When the Manhunter story started, I just couldn't wait for the next issue to come out. I'm pretty sure it was my first introduction to to Simonson's work, and I was immediately hooked. I thought Manhunter's costume was perfect, except for the metal things on his boots (c'mon Walt, he ain't running in those, lol). Walt's Batman is just great also.

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    1. It was definitely the first time I came across Simonson. Soon after he showed up in some black and white magazines, but Manhunter defined him for me until Thor.

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  3. Imaginative, adaptable, prolific, hard working -- that was Archie Goodwin.

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    1. Amazing writer. An even more amazing editor. I've rarely heard of an editor who never seemed to make someone mad at some time. But Goodwin seems to have had such respect that his decisions were just accepted.

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  4. I don't think I have seen anything from the last Manhunter story without the dialogue .

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    1. The "Last" Manhunter story was a new piece done in the late 90's. It was first available in the Manhunter collection which came out in 1998 or thereabouts -- the one with the golden cover. It has been included in all the collections since. The story is set many years after the events of "Gotterdammerumng", and contradict nothing in that story.

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