Daily Constitutional editor Adam takes us on a Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London – a metropolis-wide search for all things illustrated.
The tour so far has taken in everything from Gillray and Hogarth, to Scooby Doo and on to Deadpool and beyond! It also features the best in London comic book stores as well as galleries that showcase the best in the cartoonist's art.
DC Editor Adam writes…
Having spent almost two years curating this strand of the blog, I am delighted to open this post with an announcement: The Cartoon & Comic Book Tour Of London Blog is all set to become a real life London Walks tour! Pow! A Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London – Superheroes & Satire In The West End joins the London Walks repertoire on Saturday 15th September at 10:45am (meeting at Westminster tube exit 4).
To celebrate, here's a two-part post on Captain America in London!
Looking For Captain America In London – Part One
(You can buy digital versions of all the Marvel comics covered in this post here: marvel.com/comics)
How do you solve a problem like Captain
America?
Me personally? I don't have a problem with
the all-American, bullet-headed, Saxon mother's son type of a superhero.
I would have a problem if ALL comics
featured such leading characters, not least on grounds that it would be
ever-so-slightly boring.
But in this age of Graphic Storytelling Is
the New Lit, there is a pressure on comic book writers and artists to do
something radical with the old characters. So back to the question…
How do you solve a problem like Captain
America?
First let's address the great contradiction
at the heart of outwardly the most conventional, most squeaky clean, most
pro-establishment of all Marvel
characters (surely only Superman over at DC comes close to Cap for sheer, dull
wholesomeness): for one of the good guys, Captain America sure gets up a lotta people's
noses.
All political figures do. And if you're
going to drape a fictional character in a flag, then he's going to become a
political figure whether you want him to be or not.
His first deed on the public stage was
political:
He punched Hitler in the mush.
The diminutive Austrian painter and
decorator did, after all, have it coming.
So what's not to like?
Well…
The year is 1941, a full year before the
attack on Pearl Harbor with the isolationist movement in the US a powerful
force. As such, the comic came in for severe criticism and, legend has it,
police protection was arranged for writer Joe Simon the comic's creator after
serious threats. Grant Morrison's seminal Supergods: Our World In The Age Of the Superhero tells us that Cap artist Jack Kirby confronted American Nazi sympathisers in person with sleeves rolled-up. That's the spirit.
Built for WWII, he immediately went stale
in the early days of the cold war and lumbered along until the early 60s as Captain
America – Commie Smasher.
In 1964 Stan Lee and Jack Kirby restored
him to his former glory as head of super hero team The Avengers. Thus Cap rode
out the so-called Silver Age of Comics.
It was during the following Bronze Age
period that Cap returned to London.
The Bronze Age (roughly 1970 – 1985) is
typified by a return to the darker, weightier subject matter of the Golden Age
comics (1938 - 1950) – such themes as prejudice in all forms (see above) and social injustice.
And here’s Cap’s problem: how does a
superhero draped in the livery of the ultimate Establishment go about
representing the little guy? The trick to take him back to the context when the villains were more clear cut, back to his heyday… the war years. Enter the mono-testicular house painter once more. Cap is always much more believable punching
Hitler than socking, say climate change.
Tellingly, all three visits to London
listed here in this two-part post reference his wartime backstory.
Even the subtext of his London adventures –
in support of two British Marvel superheroes, Union Jack and Captain Britain –
calls to mind America's entry into WWII.
(I’ll come back to Captain Britain later in
this series – and he’ll feature in the walking tour this September.)
Invaders
#8 by Roy Thomas (words) and Frank Robbins (art) September 1976
Union Jack – James Montgomery Falsworth, a
peer of the realm, no less, was a hero of WWI. Captain America (as part of WWII
superhero team The Invaders with Sub Mariner and The Human Torch) comes to his
family’s aid when Union Jack’s arch enemy Baron Blood – a vampire (yup, it’s
rip roaring stuff!) – raises his ugly head once more.
The Tower of London features briefly as
does the inevitable Big Ben*. But my favorite panel features all of The
Invaders above the Thames…
(You can buy digital versions of all the Marvel comics covered in this post here: marvel.com/comics)
… note the bridge in the background?
Westminster Bridge. Check out the street lamps. Lovely, detailed touch this,
greatly at odds with the often broad brush strokes that Marvel so often apply
to non-American cities.
(*Yup. Big Ben. Just like Scooby Doo. And
Spiderman. And Deadpool. And Disney. And Danger Mouse. This why I've chosen
Westminster tube as the starting point for my Pow! A Cartoon & Comic Book
Tour of London in September.)
Find Westminster Bridge here…
Part two will follow tomorrow.
In the meantime, you can catch up with all previous stops on the Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London here: cartoonandcomicbooklondon.blogspot.co.uk/
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.