Showing posts with label steve gan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steve gan. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 December 2015

Brak The Barbarian


Brak The Barbarian was one of many sword & sorcery heroes who got their shot at comic stardom during the Bronze Age. He was the subject of three books by John Jakes, who later went on to become what the mainstream would call a proper, grown-up author, writing a ton of American historical fiction like The Bastard and the North And South trilogy.
But at this point in his career, Jakes was very much into fantasy, and Robert E. Howard in particular, writing the Brak stories basically because he'd run out of Conan stories to read. Which is surely the best reason to do anything.


Brak made his sole comic appearances in one issue of Chamber Of Chills  ( January 1973 ) and in this two-parter from issues #7 & #8 of Savage Tales two years later.
Brak's whole thing was that he was on his way to the fabled city of Khurdisan to make his fortune, having adventures and making enemies along the way.
It's all perfectly acceptable purple-prosed stuff, the only real differences between him and Conan being that Brak is a bit more naive and a lot more prone to physical damage than Cimmeria's favourite son.
So nothing revolutionary here, but that wasn't the point. Brak was there to fill a gap until the next big wave of sword & sorcery came along, so a mixture of Howardesque heroics & Leiber-like menaces was just what the public wanted.
Interestingly, Jakes himself seems to have a lot of affection for his barbarian hero, occasionally promising to tell the story of Brak's final adventure as he reaches Khurdisan at last. Extremely rare for a successful writer to be so nostalgic about their early work.

Here's Doug Moench and the criminally underrated Steve Gan adapting the very first story ' The Unspeakable Shrine ' and it's pretty great, particularly the Roy Krenkel styled artwork.
As this was the first story in the series, possibly there were plans to adapt them all, but I guess poor old Brak wasn't able to distinguish himself enough from all the other Thongor's, Claw's & Kothar's around at the time.
Shame, as this could've been a signature series for Gan in particular.






















Friday, 31 July 2015

Ka-Zar: Dark Island Of Doom



Always liked Ka-Zar. Dunno why, he really is just Tarzan with dinosaurs, but I always liked him.
Maybe it's because of Zabu. After all, any story about the adventures of a boy and his sabre-tooth tiger must have something going for it.
And sure, for the greater part of his career, Lord Plunder's dialogue consisted mostly of: Grr! Ka-Zar kills! making him immeasurably less interesting than, by comparison, chattier barbaric heroes like Conan or Kull.
But still, it's always fun to spend some time in the Savage Land. And there's some great Ka-Zar stories in his short run in Savage Tales. As I've said before, I absolutely loved the Marvel Black & White mags, there was just something extra special about them, particularly as I always seemed to get them when on vacation somewhere. Like the reprint titles of Alan Class, it's like they were summer holiday comics.
That was definitely the case with Savage Tales #9, that I remember buying on a caravan park in Devon, that comes with an embarrassment of riches including: A rip-roaring adventure in a lost kingdom with a killer penultimate panel, Zabu coming in no uncertain terms to the rescue, and Ka-Zar unnecessarily killing two hapless guards simply to steal their clothes ( something the readers complained about, and were told, in essence, the book is called Savage Tales. )
It also has a cheeky John Romita close-up insert you'll spot a mile away, and a masterful Roy Krenkel inspired art job from Steve Gan ( the man whose middle name is 'criminally underrated', poor guy ).