Thursday, February 6, 2025

Deathlok The Demolisher Day!


Rich Buckler was born on this date in 1949. Buckler was a key artist at Marvel and DC in the 70's and 80's. He became a force in the Indy market and was the editor of the Red Circle Line for Archie for a time. He created a powerful figure for Marvel - the focus of today's Dojo celebration -- Deathlok the Demolisher. 

Rich Buckler's Deathlok the Demolisher for certain was in part inspired by Mary Shelly's infamous creation, the dead body of a man from disparate parts (in this case metal) and decaying flesh is brought back to life by a perverse scientific means and let loose upon the world. The story of Deathlok is how that man, Luther Manning, deals with the dark strange transformation. He has become wedded to a computer which yammers at him incessantly while losing his wife to his best friend. He's been dead five years, but it only feels like moments. Unlike Frankenstein though, the creator of Deathlok, a mad military scientist named Ryker is all too keen to look after his creation for grim purposes, hoping to create a killing machine. He does just that but loses control. The struggle for control between Manning and Ryker is what most of the Astonishing Tales issues are all about. 


This struggle takes place in a dystopic 1990's (the near future when this comic came out, but alas the distant past for your reviewer). Deathlok was a story what the world might become if we allowed military might to rule the day, a world devastated by war, writhing with battling gangs of men seeking safety and men seeking other men for nourishment. It's a pretty grim future that Buckler and writer Doug Moench paint for in the Astonishing Tales debut. 


The late Rich Buckler has always been one of my favorite artists. He was a massive talent who brought to any company who hired him a wide array of styles as well as his very own distinctive look. He's not aping Adams or Buscema or Kirby in the Deathlok series, he's fusing his influences into fresh whole which is at once eye-catching and in need of firm attention. 




Doug Moench's scripts are complex as they try to showcase the incessant struggle in the mind of Deathlok between his Manning psyche and the computer which speaks to him relentlessly, a computer buried in his gut. He is a former man bristling with machine parts who nonetheless rejects that side of himself and so resorts sometimes to weapons of an earlier age. 





The Deathlok character continued to meander through issues of Astonishing Tales, but the adventure became increasingly hard to fathom. The "Dreaded Deadline Doom" rose up more than a few times to squelch the momentum of the story and even talents liked the always underrated Bill Mantlo had a hard time finding footing. 


By the time it was decided to move Deathlok beyond his personal war with Ryker and introduced new characters such as the robotic Hellinger and blonde primitive Godwulf, the die was cast. The series was on the way out, but not before it took a few turns back into time. 



Despite the creation of a healthy Luther Manning clone, Deathlok was still presented as a tragic character almost beyond redemption. While in the then modern Marvel universe he teamed up with Buckler's other creation Devil-Slayer. 


Before being captured and programmed to kill then President of the United States Jimmy Carter. As with many of the Bronze Age characters which saw the light of day in this fecund Marvel period, he found his saga getting snipped off in the pages of Marvel Team-Up and Marvel Two-In-One



Until in MTIO during the excellent "Saga of Project Phoenix" he was utterly destroyed. The end had come at last for Deathlok and he was at once at peace in a world in which contentment was never his to claim. Or was it?




J.M. DeMatties and Mike Zeck decided he deserved better and in an elegant time travel story brought Captain America into the near future with a reconstructed Deathlok and there he found not only victory over his enemy Hellinger, but a piece of soul gifted to him by his clone. He was, as much as he'd ever been a complete man with a mission again, one to save the world. 



Then we get a nifty little glimpse back to Deathlok's sad old days when writer David Anthony Kraft and artist Michael Golden tell an untold tale of Deathlok's days of torment in the hands of Ryker's researchers. This story was tucked neatly inside an issue of Marvel Fanfare. 


So, in spite of everything we see that Deathlok, at least when we see him last, he does find some measure of peace. That's more than Frankenstein's Monster was able to discover, so maybe the comparison between them is limited at best. Deathlok has outlived his creator Rich Buckler, and that's not nothing in this ephemeral world we live in. 

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11 comments:

  1. Deathlok was one of my favourite characters back in the day and Astonishing Tales #25 still remains one of my favourite comics. Sadly , I felt the Deathlok series lost its way a bit but those first 2 or 3 issues were wonderful . I always enjoyed Bucklers art prefering his Adams inspired style to others . His work at Red Circle and Atlas is very underrated imo. A much missed comic artist.

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    1. The series fell apart very quickly, surprising given how much Buckler had invested into it. And I totally agree about Red Circle and you already know I adore Atlas-Seaboard.

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  2. Deathlok was a challenging, thought-provoking series that I wish had found a more secure place in 1970s Marvel. Like Killraven & a few other offbeat series - Jack Kirby's Eternals among them - Deathlok would have worked better if not folded into the mainstream Marvel universe, I think. That said, J.M. DeMatteis & Mike Zeck gave him a good open-ended resolution in that Captain America story. In this age of AI, deepfakes, 24-/7 surveillance & devices that so many willingly embrace, as well as the current assault on democracy, Deathlok seems quite prescient & timely today.

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    1. I'm often reminded of Deathlok and his computer when I'm interacting with Siri or Alexa.

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  3. This series could have gone either way, but Buckler made a good run of it, most likely since it looked like he had creative control of his character. I noticed that he liked to reference songs from rock bands popular in the day for his titles: The Doors, Robin Trower, David Bowie and Traffic.

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    1. I think in the beginning he did have control, but by missing so many deadlines he gave it up. I wish the later issues had been as strong as the first two or three.

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  4. I'm with the majority here: dazzling debut, which devolved into paint-by-the-numbers formula stories. One problem I see is that Deathlok's main enemy Ryker was not a compelling menace. Those later issues introduced Hellinger and Godwulf but I never got a sense of what either of those characters wanted, and they came too late to make a difference. The comparison to Killraven is appropriate. Though that series also went through various creative shifts, and ended up being cancelled in a couple of years, the opponents were more engrossing, whether it was the Martians themselves or their many genetic creations. And it was an ensem

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  5. Comment interrupted-- I was going to say that KILLRAVEN being an ensemble book gave it more chance to shift focus from just the main hero's problems. On a subject unrelated to this post, except that it concerns another Marvel monster-protagonist of the 1970s, you might find interesting my review of DRACULA SOVEREIGN OF THE DAMNED, the Japanese anime that tried to squeeze three years of TOMB OF DRACULA continuity into a ninety-minute feature. https://nummtheory.blogspot.com/2025/02/dracula-sovereign-of-damned-1980.html

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    1. Thanks. I'll check it out! I've seen Lake of Dracula, is that another title for it?

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  6. Nope, LAKE and two other vampire flicks from the same Japanese company around the same time are all live-action. SOVEREIGN OF THE DAMNED is an anime that barely looks like a conventional anime, because they're trying to emulate the look of Colan pencils. The whole movie was on YouTube last I looked.

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    1. Thanks. I'll seek it out. (Time passes.) Found it! Looks fascinating.

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