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Thread: Masks #1 - A Writer's Commentary By Chris Roberson

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    Default Masks #1 - A Writer's Commentary By Chris Roberson

    Chris Roberson writes for Bleeding Cool;

    PAGE 1

    I?ve always been a huge fan of the Green Hornet and Kato. I think I was first exposed to them in those episodes of the Adam West Batman series that guest-starred Van Williams and Bruce Lee, and I later sought out reruns of the Green Hornet TV series they were in. But my favorite Green Hornet stories have probably been in the comics, from Ron Fortier?s run at Now back in the 80s and 90s, to Matt Wagner?s brilliant origin story at Dynamite in recent years.

    PAGE 2



    The Shadow. The first, and still the best. But that Shadow wasn't just the inspiration for all the pulp heroes that followed him. In the world of comics, a certain dark knight detective owes more than a little to the Shadow. In fact, Bill Finger admitted in later life that he had borrowed the plot of the first Batman story, "The Case of the Chemical Syndicate," from a Shadow story (which Will Murray and Anthony Tollin have identified as "Partners in Peril").

    PAGE 3



    Not many people can get the drop on Kato. The Shadow is one of the few.

    PAGE 6



    In his guise as Lamont Cranston, the Shadow spent a lot of time hanging out in the Cobalt Club. I think we lost something valuable when crimefighters stopped going to exclusive night spots in their off hours to drink cocktails?

    PAGE 7



    The roots of my fascination not only with costumed vigilantes but with crossovers in general can large be traced to early exposure to the ?Wold Newton? stories of Philip José Farmer, and in particular the ?family tree? section of Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life, which I read at an early and impressionable age. Farmer advanced, and later rejected, the theory that the Shadow and the Spider were both fragmented personalities of the same confused individual. But more alarming for my young mind was the suggestion that Margo Lane had a sister named Lois?

    PAGE 8



    ?There is the law, Mister Reid, and then there is justice.?

    This is pretty much the central question of the miniseries, so far as I?m concerned, boiled down to one sentence.

    PAGE 13



    That guy looks familiar.

    PAGES 14 and 15

    The inspiration for the plot of Masks, as I?ve mentioned many times before, was a three-part storyline that ran in the Spider magazine in 1938, in which Richard Wentworth went up against a ?Party of Justice? that instituted a fascist police state in New York. The idea with Masks was to take the Spider?s story from the original Norvell Page novels as a starting position, and then explore how the other costumed vigilantes in New York (and elsewhere) would have responded. So Masks isn?t an adaptation of that original Spider storyline, as much as it is a palimpsest of sorts, a new story written in between the lines of the original.

    PAGE 16



    Pulp fans might recognize the name ?Tony Quinn,? crusading district attorney. We?ll be seeing a lot of him in coming issues. And there?s that Rafael Vega guy again?

    PAGE 17



    Let me just point out two things at this point. First, that I love the design Alex Ross came up with for the Black Legion troopers here. And second, that I still can?t get over the fact that I?ve written something that has been illustrated by Alex Ross?

    PAGE 20



    Sometimes, in the early days of a project, I find myself writing a script without knowing yet who will be drawing it. But in instances where I know who the artist will be and am familiar with their work, I?m often able to imagine exactly how I think the artist will approach a given scene or panel. And what I?m writing in the script is a description of how I?m imagining the artist will draw it. Almost always, what the artist ends up doing is far better than I had imagined (which is why I?m a writer, not an artist, among many other reasons). What Alex did with this page is exactly what I had imagined, only a million times better.

    PAGE 21

    Enter, the Spider?
    Mike H. and Dawnelldo like this.

  2. #2
    Bleeding Cool Mike H.'s Avatar
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    I really enjoyed the first issue of this series. It remains to be seen how the change in artists will affect it, but for moment it's off to a terrific start. Congrats to Chris and Alex, and many thanks for staying so true to the roots of these characters.

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    Zen Master of Cool MicroZone's Avatar
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    This is the first time I've seen Roberson admit that this is based on Norvell Page's original Spider pulps, so I am glad he has finally done so here, and mentioned Page by name. Would have been nice for the publisher to have acknowledged Page's original work on the story in the credits, even as just a "special thanks" like Michael Uslan was given who created or wrote nothing with any of these characters, but is a Hollywood producer. Esp considering that The Spider is a fully licensed property and that the three-part novel this is taken from is actually still in print and readily available from Amazon.com.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike H. View Post
    I really enjoyed the first issue of this series. It remains to be seen how the change in artists will affect it, but for moment it's off to a terrific start. Congrats to Chris and Alex, and many thanks for staying so true to the roots of these characters.
    Agreed. Loved this issue.

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    Quote Originally Posted by MicroZone View Post
    This is the first time I've seen Roberson admit that this is based on Norvell Page's original Spider pulps, so I am glad he has finally done so here, and mentioned Page by name. Would have been nice for the publisher to have acknowledged Page's original work on the story in the credits, even as just a "special thanks" like Michael Uslan was given who created or wrote nothing with any of these characters, but is a Hollywood producer. Esp considering that The Spider is a fully licensed property and that the three-part novel this is taken from is actually still in print and readily available from Amazon.com.
    There's a back page ad for the enemy of the state novel

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    Zen Master of Cool MicroZone's Avatar
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    So a paid ad makes up for an editorial acknowledgement of the source material? Someone should have told DC that all they had to do was run an ad for Alan Moore's DC work and everyone should have been cool with Before Watchman.
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    [QUOTE=MicroZone;461156]So a paid ad makes up for an editorial acknowledgement of the source material? Someone should have told DC that all they had to do was run an ad for Alan Moore's DC work and everyone should have been cool with Before
    Exposure of your work, is the greatest compalint you can get.

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    Is this like a poor man's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen?

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    Consultant of Cool J.R. LeMar's Avatar
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    Got it for free, and just read it today. Mini-review here: J.R. REVIEWS "MASKS" #1. I had a feeling that the DA character would be one of the heroes, I assumed he was The Spider. Just looked it up on Google, so now I know which character he will be. I like the twist with the artist who arrested, I guess that's a good way to fit "Zorro" into this series, since it's in a different timeline than the original version. I didn't know Alex Ross wouldn't be drawing the rest of the series, so that's disappointing to learn, but I'm still looking forward to the rest.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tom Strong View Post
    Is this like a poor man's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen?
    Nope. Its really good.

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