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Back for another dose of the Down, But
Not Out? Okay, so maybe you accidentally clicked a link
for midget porn and found yourself here. That’s okay, while
you’re here, you might as well stay a while!
So, what’s this column all about?
I’m here to hopefully get you interested in comic books. Or,
if you’re already interested in comics, then I’m here to
shine some light on books you might not have read or have
and just wanna relive via what my limited writing skills can
provide.
Let’s get on with it, shall we?
Ragman #1 (of 5) - “Origin of the Tatterdemalion”
Original Release Date: September 1976
Created By: Joe Kubert and Bob Kanigher
Script: Bob Kanigher
Art: The Redondo Studio
Sometimes
it’s easier to get the innocent to do your dirty work for
you. That’s the thought behind Vorst’s decision to have a
young child bounce a ball toward a man in a red car. On its
own, that seems innocent enough, right?
It would have been if the ball had not actually been a bomb.
It would have been if the ball had not hit the red car and
exploded, sending the man in it to his doom and injuring the
girl unlucky enough to have been innocent that day.
Vorst is not alone, though. His partner-in-crime, Anders,
flees the scene along with him. Paranoia is key for
criminals and it’s what causes Vorst to make an even more
fatal mistake in a back alley. His feeling that the shadows
were moving in the dark, dead end, helps him decide to pull
a pistol and shoot blindly into the darkness. Anders hurries
Vorst, telling him that it’s nothing but a pile of rags he’s
shooting at. The two reach a fire escape and take to the
roof of an old tenement.
Little do they know that pile of rags is something alive;
something full of vengeance; the Ragman. The green,
rag-cloaked figure leaps up the ladder after the two thugs.
Vorst calls out to Anders that something is after them. It’s
not long after spotting the Tattered Tatterdemalion before
Anders’ body is crushed against the pavement below.
The mysterious costumed avenger leaves the scene, thinking
nothing of the death he has caused, and returns to his real
life at “Rags-N-Tatters,” a pawn store run by the Ragman’s
alter ego, Rory Regan.
The next morning, Rory opens up shop for business as usual.
After the normal bit of neighborhood customers, Bette, a
freelance photographer for The Clarion Call and possible
love interest, stops by. She shows Rory the morning edition
of the Clarion Call featuring pictures she took last evening
of the Ragman battling thugs on a nearby rooftop.
Bette reminds Rory that, while he may not be a hero like the
Ragman, he could have so much more than this lowly pawn
shop. She tells him that he’s falling into the same rut his
father did with the store.
Rory tells Bette that it’s not possible for him to leave the
business and that she just doesn’t understand. Bette leaves
him, but not without telling him, “You’re hopeless Rory! You
like living amidst junk… just like your poor father!”
Rory watches her leave and again repeats that she just
doesn’t understand; she doesn’t understand what it was like
when he was a child and his father, using his “junk wagon,”
would ride through the city, taking people’s junk to resell
in “Rags-N-Tatters.” His father would explain that it was
his duty to do all of this so that he could properly take
care of Rory. It may not have been a glamorous job, but it
was all they had.
Later, when Rory was older and after he’d returned from
Vietnam, he would go behind the old store and watch his
father and his father’s friends hit the bottle. Each of them
had been something years before in their life, but now they
were nothing; each of them clung to their glamorous past
while their current lives were nothing.
A few days after talking to his father and those friends out
behind the store, the old men found two million dollars
stuffed in an old mattress that had been brought in. The old
guys decide to take the mattress out back to hid it amongst
the junk that had been piling up, but once they make it
outside they’re confronted by a couple of thugs wanting to
know exactly where the money was.
Unfortunately for Rory’s father and friends, the thugs shoot
down a couple of live wires suspended above them. With the
live wires on them, the thugs demand to know where the money
is. Rory makes it out back and attempts to pull his father
and friends out by having them lock hands. With one pull the
current flows through Rory, his father, and friends via
their hands.
Some time later, Rory awakens to find his father and friends
dead. Rory wonders what in the junkyard could possibly be
worth dying over. Stumbling to the telephone to call the
police, he finds a note from his father. On it, Rory’s
father explains that he was given a costume that’d be
perfect for the costume party Rory plans on taking Bette to
next week.
Rory, with a plan in his mind, puts it on…
*****
That’s that for the first issue of
Ragman. If you’re familiar with the character from DC’s
2005 Day of Vengeance miniseries, then you’re
probably wondering what’s up with this Ragman.
1976’s Ragman was pretty damn cool; he was a straight-up
vigilante looking for justice and he did it his own way.
It’s really your typical dark vigilante fare, which has been
a staple of comic books over the years. Nothing wrong with
that, but then again, nothing too special; this is probably
why this book only lasted five issues.
So, the “new” Ragman, what’s up with him? Why is he
different?
Well, if you want to get technical, the Crisis on
Infinite Earths actually erased the origin of the 1976
Ragman. It was Keith Giffen in 1992 that recreated the
character as the one you’re probably more familiar with. His
Ragman is much more mystical; he collects the souls of
evil-doers, which creates a patch on his “rags.”
Giffen’s Ragman had another miniseries in 1993, penned by
Elaine Lee, and then made various guest appearances in DC
books (Batman, Martian Manhunter) across the years. It
wasn’t until Bill Willingham’s Day of Vengeance that
the character gained any real audience. Willingham writes a
damn cool Ragman, so if you’re not already knee-deep in
Infinite Crisis (or you just didn’t buy that mini in the
first place), you should, because it’s a fun read. And hey,
with the success of that, he’ll be appearing in the
Infinite Crisis/Day of Vengeance spin-off, Shadowpact,
so there’s lots of Ragman in your future.
Hopefully this will give you a little insight as to where
the character originally came from. For most people, Ragman
probably began with Giffen, but hey, now you know better!
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