Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Plastic Man #19 (2022 Comic Book and Graphic Novel Reading Challenge)

Plastic Man was created by Jack Cole, first appearing in Police Comics #1 (August, 1941). As small time hood Eel O'Brian, a burglary went wrong. The cops crowded in and Eel's fellow gang members abandoned him. O'Brian gets shot in the shoulder and falls into a vat of undisclosed chemicals. Instead of dying, O'Brian escaped, only to pass out on the grounds of a monastery. 

O'Brian awakens on a bed, taken in by the monks. He also discovers that he's got incredible powers. O'Brian's body has taken on the properties of rubber. He can stretch, change shapes and bounce! 

Inspired by the kindness of the monks, Eel O'Brian forsakes his criminal past and becomes a crime fighter. With his sidekick, the paunchy Woozy Winks, Eel defends his city as the superhero Plastic Man. By day, he remains Eel O'Brian in order to infiltrate the criminal underground. At night, he changes the composition of his face, dons white goggles and fights for right. And if he collects some reward money, well, a hero's gotta eat don't they?

In 1956, Plastic Man's original publisher, Quality Comics shut down. Sometime shortly after that, DC Comics bought the rights to Plastic Man and other Quality characters. It wasn't until 1966 that the House That Superman Built gave Plas his own series. That series ran for only 10 issues from December 1966-June 1968. Gil Kane (Superman), Jack Sparling (Silver Surfer), Win Mortimer(Night Nurse) were among the talented artists who worked on the title. Doom Patrol's Arnold Drake was the scripter. 

Plastic Man made an unexpected return in 1976. With a March cover date, the revival continued the legacy numbering with #11. This new run had art by Ramona Fradon (Metamorpho) and Ernie Chan (Conan The Barbarian). Steve Skeates (Blue Beetle) and John Albano (Jonah Hex) were the plotters.

For the issue I read for my reading challenge, the creative team was of Albano and Fradon. Detective Comics' Bob Smith was on inks and Ben Oda (Flash Gordon) was the letterer. 

In this issue, a gang of street toughs are terrorizing the citizens of Plastic Man and Woozy's town. With assistance from a mousy grocery delivery man, Plas puts the hurt on the gang leader who swears revenge on the employee. But before they get their hands on Plastic Man's accomplice, the young man has an encounter with a UFO. 

Thinking the meek male is a threat, the aliens shoot him with an energy beam. As he falls off the roof of his apartment building, Plastic Man tries to rescue the guy. But he's too late! Yet instead of having plummeted to his doom, the young gentleman shrugs things off and goes back to his apartment to sleep.

Thus begins the career of the newest hero of the block! With super hearing, the newcomer to crime fighting can get the upper hand on tackling the baddies first. It looks like the city will no longer need Plastic Man! Will he retire? Or is it time to find a new city to patrol?

The Plastic Man revival only lasted another issue. However, that was not the end of Plastic Man. Just 2 years later, Plastic Man would return. This time in animated form. The Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show would air on ABC from 1978-81. For all of 1980, he became the one of the cover features for Adventure Comics. A 4 issue miniseries was created post-CRISIS in 1988. In the 90s, Plastic Man was eventually made a member of the JLA thanks to Grant Morrison. The 2000s saw new blood injected into the character in a bi-monthly series by Kyle Baker that also ran for 20 issues. 

Over the years, Plastic Man has been seen as a very goofy character. That's how he was created by Jack Cole. It's also how I remember him on the cartoon series. In the past 30 years or so, Plastic Man has been a constant headache to Batman and isn't allowed within 100 feet of Wonder Woman. Yet with this issue, something was off.

Yes, Plastic Man disguises himself as numerous objects like a fire hydrant and his patented bouncing ball. However, this version of Plastic Man is pretty serious. He's almost has a Batman '66 kinda uber-boy scout kind of vibe him. Even when he thinks that his town doesn't need him any more, Plastic Man is more resolved to find another place to call home rather that have an over-the-top pity party like the character is wont to do in more recent titles and animated series. If anything was cheesy about this issue, it was Jeanette Kahn's 'Stan's Soapbox' style column about the revival of Showcase Presents and the mildly racist artist stoplight about one DC's up and coming talent, Mike Nasser (now known as Michael Netzer).

Despite the very uncharacteristic seriousness of Plastic Man, this issue was pretty decent. Though I thought it was strange for the narrator to say that Eel feel into a vat of acid. I don't think acid would give Plas any powers. I think had he fell into acid, the substance would have torn Eel to shreds. Okay- so the edits needed to work on consistency. It's still a fun read.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Completing this review completes Task #13 (Published the Year You Were Born) of the 2022 Comic Book and Graphic Novel Reading Challenge. 

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