cdm72's Full Review: Alan Moore, Garry Leach, Alan Davis - Miracleman: ...
In the event, God forbid, that one day all of my comics went up in flames and I had time to save only a handful, the choice is simple. Id save my entire run of Miracleman, #s 1-24. It really is no contest. I received the first issue of this series, written by Alan Moore with art by Garry Leach, free when I ordered some comics from one of those back issue companies you see advertised in comics. This company, I cant remember the name, used to send 2 free grab bag comics with every order. With this particular order, I got a months-old issue of Marvel Age, and the first issue of Miracelman. A few months later, while browsing my local comic shop, I saw the entire run of this series being sold for, I believe, around $100. It was worth every penny.
A brief history:
Miracleman (whose real name is Marvelman, but to avoid any possible lawsuits from a certain comics giant was renamed when he made his move to America in the 80s) was born in 1954 when Fawcett Comics, its publisher, found itself with no material to publish once the Captain Marvel stories were put on hold during a lawsuit from DC Comics when they decided Fawcetts Captain Marvel too closely resembled DCs own Superman. So Fawcett decided to, instead of copying another companys character, copy their own and the transition from Captain Marvel and the Captain Marvel Family to Marvelman and his sidekicks Young Marvelman and Kid Marvelman was an easy one.
The characters:
Mike Moran, Dicky Dauntless, and Johnny Bates were the Marvelman family, but eventually, as comics sometimes do, they vanished. However, there was something about them. In 1982, Alan Moore and Garry Leach got to revive the character for Warrior magazine, being published independently by Dez Skinn. In 1985, the strip was picked up by Eclipse Comics and ran for 24 issues before vanishing once again, this time due to Eclipse Comics going bankrupt.
Book one:
One day in 1963, Miracleman and his sidekicks were caught in an atom bomb blast. Young and Kid are killed (so it is believed. Johnny Bates, Kid Miracleman, turns up later in the first issue, grown up and very dangerous) and Mike is left with no memory of his time as Miracleman nor of the magic work, Kimota, which is used to summon his alter-ego. When Book One opens, Mike Moran is a 40-something-year-old Londoner. Its 1982, hes married, and works as a freelance journalist. One day at a political rally, Mike and a bunch of other journalists are taken hostage by a group of terrorists who plan to steal the plutonium from the plant the reporters are there to write about. Mike inadvertently utters the magic word he hasnt been able to remember for almost 20 years, and Marvelman--sorry, Miracleman--is reborn.
This first book, A Dream of Flying, reprints the first 3 issues, which were also reprints from the original Warrior run, and tells the story of Mikes first few months back as Miracleman as he and wife Liz try to adjust to this huge new addition to their lives.
What Mike learns about himself, his sidekicks, and the entire world hes grown up knowing surprises not only him, but the reader as well. Early on, as Mike is telling his wife about his career as Miracleman in the 50s and 60s, she asks why shes never heard of him. Mike says maybe the government hushed it up. But in book one we learn this wouldnt have been necessary as Mikes history as Miracleman was nothing more than an experiment, a computer-generated life inside a government facility called Project Zarathustra where Mike gained his powers, very much like The Matrix only without the kung-fu. Book one is a short one compared to the ones that followed, spanning only 3 issues when books 2-4 take up a good 5-6 issues each, but as a starting point, it just doesnt get any better.
Once upon a time there were three heroes. They knew magic words. They did good deeds. And they killed all the monsters and dragons... They were living happily ever after when one of them died. His name was Young Miracleman and he died by fire. One up to the dragons. The second hero was called Miracleman. He came through the fire, but it made him forget he was a hero. He married and lived happily ever after... Until yesterday. Yesterday he remembered that he was a hero. But it wasnt until today that he remembered about the dragons... The third hero was only a little boy. He was called Kid Miracleman and he was very powerful. Without the other two heroes to bother him, he could do whatever he liked... He grew up. He grew up into a dragon.
Get out Liz. Get out of the building. Get out of the AREA! Now,Liz!!
And she runs. Liz Moran is a brave woman, and she loves her husband very much. But she is only human. She runs...for to be human is not enough...when gods cry war amidst the thunder.
Christ, I love Alan Moores writing. But to see the page is so much more powerful. Garry Leach, and later, Alan Davis, do such justice to Moores words, the menace of those panels jumps out at you and its one of the few times reading a comic book youll feel yourself in danger. The scene with Mike and Johnny Bates on the balcony outside Johnnys office, holy crap, I still get chills just looking at the panels and thinking of the discussion between them.
John, I listened to your story just now...rags to riches, redemption through honest toil. Its a great story. I really wanted to believe it, John. But then halfway through I got this funny idea into my head. I thought, What if hes lying? I tried to get rid of it. I tried. But I couldnt. I thought What if he didnt lose his powers? What if he survived that blast that took out me and Dickey and was STILL Kid Miracleman? I tried to imagine what it would feel like...to be sixteen years old and the most powerful creature on the face of the planet...and to be answerable to no one. You could do anything, John. Youd never need to turn back to dull, weak, human Johnny Bates ever again. Oh, sure, you could take his name, his identity...but you could stay as Kid Miracleman forever. You could have it all...money, prestige, fame... You could sever all your links with humanity. You could become remoreselss, unstoppable...and totally corrupt. Is that it, John? Is that what happened? Youre still Kid Miracleman, arent you? I can tell by your voice, by the way you stand...youre not human, John. I can feel it . . . John, are you doing something to my mind? Liz comes outside and with the distraction, Mike pushes John over the rail. And John doesnt fall.
Thats the kind of stuff that make comics memorable. Moores words, Leachs art, a perfect combination, the look on Lizs face, the evil on Johns face. And thats just in the first third of the book. What follows from his awakening will keep you guessing to the end as Moore reveals one more layer and one more layer and one more layer, a bit at a time. Miracleman, Book One: A Dream of Flying has me more psyched to be reading comics than Ive been in over 10 years and I cant wait to jump into Book Two.
Epinions.com periodically updates pricing and product information from third-party sources, so some information may be slightly out-of-date. You should confirm all information before relying on it.