Each week, I use this column to write about the world of
comics from my perspective as a creator who has been inside
and out and back again. This week, I am going to step a
little further back and try to figure out why I bother with
the whole thing.
In the mid 90s I tried my luck in the small press boom, and
it predictably went bust. So now I am trying it again, once
again working with two close friends who were with me back
in the old days.
So why am I walking over this same ground that clearly leads
to doom? And, if this whole thing died once before, what
makes me think it will work this time?
I am not certain, but I am starting to think it has
something to do with Iron Fist, and the fact that in comics
“dead” is never “dead”.
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Iron
Fist is a character that Marvel created to cash in on the
popularity of Kung-Fu movies in the early 70s. The stylistic
elements that would define him were drawn from different
comics genres and movies that had been floating around the
cultural consciousness for several years. Genetic material
from martial arts, fantasy, super-hero comics, and detective
mysteries came together and gestated for ten issues of
Marvel Premiere that bridged from 1974 into1975. In November
of 1975, Iron Fist arrived in the Marvel Universe fully
formed with a costume, powers, secret identity (Danny Rand),
origin, and the requisite motivating pathos in Iron Fist
issue 1. Just a month and a half after I was born into the
real universe.
Separated at birth? Not quite. But our paths would cross
again.
While
I spent the next few years being a little kid, Iron Fist was
busy digging himself into the Marvel Universe. His firm
footing in the narrative elements of the Kung-Fu genre kept
him from going the way of other trend hoppers like Rocket
Racer, but it also limited his appeal. He was real enough to
have a place in that world, but never iconic or meaningful
enough to really break into the consciousness of the general
public. Everyone in the Marvel Universe seemed to know him,
but no one in the real world did. The same could be said for blaxploitation super star Luke Cage. The Marvel Universe was
built on the back of misunderstood loners and outsiders.
Lots of them got so good at appealing to the misunderstood
loner in all of us that they broke out and became parade
floats and cartoons. Luke and Danny did not. The rich white
industrialist from the Mystic City of K'un L'un and the
tough black vigilante from Harlem bonded over being loners
in a world of outcasts.
Together,
their series Power Man and Iron Fist made it to the 150th
issue. Meanwhile, I was soaking up all the super hero
cartoons and movies I could find. I didn't really move into
the orbit of comic books until I took an interest in G.I.
Joe figures. Through the covers of the comics on the rack
next to G.I. Joe, and the house ads in the comics
themselves, I became aware of the pantheon of Marvel heroes.
Though superheroes still seemed a bit silly to me, these
ones seemed inherently cooler than the Super Friends I had
grown up with. But, basically, I knew what I was getting
into. Sure, the X-Men were cooler and edgier than Aquaman,
but I could tell that in one look at the cover. I didn't
need to dig deeper.
In
the summer of 1986, the desperate boredom of camping in
northern Michigan forced me to pick up and actually read my
first issue of Uncanny X-Men. That same summer, in issue 150
of Power Man and Iron Fist, Iron Fist was beaten to death by
a young boy whose super powers were killing him. I had just
made my first real step into super-hero comic books, and
Iron Fist just made a big step out of them. But in doing so
he lead me to that mystic Tibetan bridge which only appears
once every ten years. This particular bridge ran from the
craggy slopes of casual readership to the gleaming towers
and parapets of devoted fandom.
Iron Fist died to show me the way to that sacred temple of
fandom. As cool as they were, the X-Men could not have done
it on their own. It wasn't just the mystery of Iron Fist
that drew me in, it was the way that mystery was presented.
It was like an open secret. Everyone knew him. Spider Man
knew him, so did Captain America. His buddy Luke Cage was
even a member of the Fantastic Four at one time. All of the
characters I knew from cartoons and coloring books knew all
about him, but I knew nothing. He was one degree removed
from me, and I had to know what that degree was.
The existence of this mysterious character sent me a
message. And that message was that there was more to comics
than I could see at a glance, and if I dug I would be
rewarded. It was more than just the unknown. I didn't know
anything about Daredevil, but I could basically guess. A
more professional version of Spider Man. And, if I was
curious beyond that, I could just pick up an issue and get
some questions answered. I knew the basic deal with super
heroes, and most of these guys seemed to be the standard
formula modified by one or two degrees. No great enigma.
Iron Fist, and his tragic death, were different. If, at his
core, he was the standard super hero with some surface
modifications then that core was far deeper than I could
perceive. One of my very first exposures to the character
was that final issue. I remember getting to the end. That
last panel, a tear in Luke Cage's eye and his CCA approved
swear word “christmas.” And it was over. His friend was dead
and the whole thing was over. It wasn't a teeth-gritting
“you guys go, I'll hold them off!” kind of death. Danny
wasn't even conscious to know he was dying. No one swore
revenge, even Danny's best friend knew that the kid who
killed him would have been sorry for what he had done.
Nothing about it made easy sense for the casual reader. I
knew, because I was the casual reader and it did not make
sense to me. There must be more to this Iron Fist. There was
the promise of special, secret, knowledge and a depth of
understanding for those intrepid enough to seek it.
Lots of people might stand on those rocky Tibetan cliffs and
say “there must be some city across that bridge and behind
those clouds.” The same way I figured there must be more to
Iron Fist than met the eye. Most people, though, are content
to hold their firm footing, or continue climbing to some
other peak. And most people are not comic book readers. Iron
Fist's mysteries and contradictions promised me that if I
took those steps, and explored that mystery, I would be
rewarded.
“Follow me,” he said, “wonders await.”
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I am not sure how those others can resist that allure, but I
couldn't. I dug into back issue bins and quarter boxes, and
wolves or no wolves I was crossing that bridge. I didn't
even notice when it shimmered and vanished. Maybe I was
trapped, but who cares? I didn't want to leave.
It might have been curiosity that drew me in initially, but
it was Iron Fist's promise that that curiosity would be
rewarded that made me crossover and become comic book
reader. And by the time I felt like I had a good handle on
who he was I had learned about ROM, Nomad, The Punisher,
Shadow Cat, The Beyonder, Daredevil and dozens of others
whose secret identities I could still rattle off for you.
And he did all that postmortem.
Is Iron Fist my spirit-guide into the world of super hero
comics? I don't know. But, I can still vividly recall a
dream I had while still in middle school, or 'junior high'
as it is called in some parts of the country. My neighbor
and I were fighting in the rain outside my school. I threw
him to the ground, and when he got up to charge me, he was
Wolverine. I was not as frightened as I should have been and
when I wound up to strike him, I found that my right hand
had become “like unto a thing of iron.” I was Iron Fist and
I was brawling with Wolverine.
That is all I can remember of that dream. But I think it is
enough. That is what we comic book fans really want, isn't
it? Not the actual details of the fight, but the promise of
that drama. Two heroes, claws out and fists blazing, about
to lock in rain soaked combat. That one image, that one
panel, holds for us the promise that mysteries will unfold
and answers will be found. Who will win and, more
importantly, why are they fighting?
Anyone can look at these two figures and ask those surface
level questions. As comic fans, though, we have gained that
special secret knowledge of who these guys are and what they
can do. That knowledge, and the pattern of seeking it out
over a lifetime, leads us to believe that those questions
are not only answerable, but worth answering.
So where has my long-lost twin and spirit guide lead me?
His journey has taken him through death and resurrection,
through re-launches and false-starts, to find himself once
again a firmly planted embodiment of the rich texture of the
Marvel Universe.
Iron Fist is slated to return in The Immortal Iron Fist
by
Ed Brubaker,
Matt Fraction, and David Aja. Issue one will
hit the stands this fall, right about the time that my own
comic book, Rapid City, will be making its debut.
Iron Fist was created by Roy Thomas and Gil Kane for Marvel
Comics.
Thanks to
wikipedia for “fact
checking”
Visit Josh Dahl at his website
www.monolithllc.com
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