Daily Constitutional editor Adam continues his Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London…
You can catch up with all 27 previous stops at the Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London blog here cartoonandcomicbooklondon.blogspot.co.uk.
Panel 28: Cry Havoc
This Cartoon &
Comic Book London blog sometimes takes on a life of its own. Time after time I
sit down to blog about one subject only for another to elbow its way in and
take over.
"Events, dear
boy, events," to borrow from the quote often attributed to former Prime
Minister Harold MacMillan.
(MacMillan was on my
mind as I've been making notes for a post on political cartoons in readiness
for the mayoral election later this year. The idea of Prime Minister as failed
superhero starts in the UK with MacMillan in 1958, from the pen of London Evening Standard cartoonist Vicky…
I'll be back to both
Mac and Vicky at a later date.)
The post originally
intended for this slot featured what is rapidly becoming a running theme in
this series – Big Ben.
The world's most famous
clock has chimed in on no less than EIGHT different cartoons/comic books so far
– Deadpool & Spiderman, The Fantastic Four, Scooby Doo, three different
Disney films and Kieron Gillen's Über.
The clock was due to
strike nine in my assessment of the view from Diana Prince's new flat – she
seems to have moved into County Hall, SE1…
… in DC's Wonder Woman
The New 52 (visit the DC website HERE or pick up a copy at Orbital Comics on Great Newport Street WC2).
Yup, Wonder Woman's a
Londoner now. I wonder if she pays the Congestion Charge in her invisible plane
or if she just tosses the fines in the bin like the American ambassador?
Anyhoo… I'm holding
the Wonder Woman post over until a later date but although the post has changed, the clock remains the
same.
Bong…
There it is again, ol'
Big Ben…
… on the cover of the
outstanding new book Cry Havoc written by Simon Spurrier and drawn by Ryan
Kelly. (Variant cover shown is by Cameron Stewart).
It's unfair to pass
judgement after just one issue, but on the evidence here we're in for a white-knuckle
ride with Cry Havoc.
This first episode is
a fireworks display of great storytelling, literary and mythology references
and exceptionally strong artwork. A particular nod goes to the colourists -
Nick Filardi, Lee Loughridge and Matt Wilson. With the tale unfolding along
three separate strands, each colourist creates a unique feel in their
particular storyline.
The title refs
Shakespeare; it is part set in London. It's got music in it (and a serious
contender for the best comic book band name of all time – The Squids of
Forbearance!). The narrative features supernatural creatures and the fantastic
line, "I think I got mugged by a werewolf". AND there's a black ops
mercenary mission behind the lines in Afghanistan.
Seriously. What's not
to like?
Cry Havoc has
particular resonance for this blogger as it features a location from one of my
London Walks walking tours – Ghosts of the Old City. More, it features a direct
reference to one of the London legends explored on the tour, that of the Black
Dog of Newgate Prison.
I've visited the Old
Bailey before in this series (in Panel No.14, V For Vendetta)
and that location features prominently in issue one of Cry Havoc. Artist Ryan Kelly has made
some excellent choices in terms of angles on this famous London landmark. Big
Ben doesn't make it into the narrative this time, but is deployed as an excellent setting device on the
variant cover and London Zoo features, too.
But the London
location I've chosen from issue one is Dalston.
Our contemporary comic
book writers and artists are really putting our less glamourous neighbourhoods
on the map (see earlier post, Panel No.10 on Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie's The Wicked + The Divine set in Brockley).
Here's Dalston's debut in Cry Havoc, I'm loving the hipster gag…
… and Spurrier also adds
some pithy comments about gentrification in his annotations.
Issue One is hanseled
by a quote from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. And just like Conrad's tale,
Cry Havoc opens in a seemingly familiar, almost reassuring London, only to
quickly unfold into an unsettling, and thoroughly engrossing world of
imagination.
We Londoners are spoiled at the moment for great London-set comics – the aforementioned WikDiv, the adaptation of Rivers of London and Metroland to name but three.
Taxi to Metropolis? Gotham City? At this time o' night, guv'nor? You're 'avin a laugh, intcha? Cry Havoc is yet another reason to never leave London. Can't wait for issue 2.
Issue 2 of Cry Havoc
is out in February, published by Image Comics.
Coming soon on The Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London… Vicky, Wonder Woman, Gillray and Comix Creatrix at the House of Illustration.
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A
London Walk costs £10 – £8 concession. To join a London Walk, simply meet your
guide at the designated tube station at the appointed time. Details of all
London Walks can be found at www.walks.com.