Tales of the Parodyverse >> View Post
Post By
Hatman

Member Since: Thu Jan 01, 1970
Posts: 618
In Reply To
killer shrike

Subj: I hate to say it, but Ego the Living Beard made them awesome
Posted: Wed Aug 18, 2010 at 04:30:28 pm EDT (Viewed 491 times)
Reply Subj: Sure. After you explain the appeal of Alpha Flight. ;)
Posted: Tue Aug 17, 2010 at 10:17:25 pm EDT (Viewed 5 times)



    Quote:
    But seriously, folks, I liked Druid for the same reason I enjoy Moondragon, Quicksilver, and USAgent. They're jerks. Jerks who fought the good fight, but jerks none the less. Granted, some writers went too far in their portrayals of Druid as asshole (Walt Simonson in his crappy Avengers run) or just made him an out and villain (Warren Ellis), but before that he was a great character. One of my favorite TV characters was Charles Winchester from M*A*S*H and even beyond the obvious physical similarities they had a lot in common- erudite, competent, snobbish men who still ultimately did the right thing.


I am a USAgent fan (though he could sometimes get depicted as too much of a jerk sometimes), but Druid has never interested me. Perhaps a better costume would help, and if he was a little less creepy. Probably the fact he was screwing over Captain Monica, a character I'm very fond of, doesn't help my opinion of him.

As to the appeal of Alpha Flight, I do admit a part of it is that they are Canadian. When John Byrne wrote the title, it really did feel like the team was set in Canada. Most writers had no idea how to do that and it was plainly obvious (at least to this Canuck).

But beyond that, I love the personalities that make up Alpha Flight. They are a team of misfits (the original line-up includes a midget, an alien, a mythical beast, a schizophrenic, a goddess, an aboriginal mystic, and a very hostile gay man...none of which really fit in anywhere) that comes together and that clash of personalities makes for some great story-telling. Nobody really belongs, so everyone does!

Byrne really did his homework when he was working on Alpha Flight...I actually wrote a university paper on Shaman for my Introduction to World Religions course. Byrne really did research the Sarcee tribe and Shaman's powers were a natural extension of their beliefs and culture. That attention to detail is amazing.

The line-up of Alpha Flight really opens itself up to telling many types of stories. With Snowbird, Shaman, and Sasquatch you open up a lot of mystical/mythical stories. Box and (again) Sasquatch are the link to the technological. Aurora alone has tons of potential with her mental problems. Northstar, Talisman, and Shaman open up possibilities for racial/prejudice stories. Puck has links to the east (aka an excuse to bring in ninjas). Guardian has ties to the corporate world. You can tell a lot of stories with this group.

While I do have every issue of Alpha Flight volume 1-3 (plus mini's, one-shots, and Omega Flight), I will admit that nobody has held a candle to Byrne's original run.

~Hat~