After a lengthy writing absence, I’ve decided to revive this blog and focus on its original purpose, highlighting my love for Warren’s horror comics. This has been primarily inspired by my trip back through Creepy, Eerie and Vampirella for the first time in years as I follow the Bare Bones Ezine which I highly recommend checking out for Peter Enfantino and Jack Seabrook’s journey through Warren which is currently featuring Warren’s publications in 1975.
My new
focus is to analyze particular story highlights of Warren’s nearly 20 year run
of horror comics. Years back I had a post on my favorite Warren stories and I
would consider this a sort of enhancement of that, providing a particular focus
on stories that either are among what I consider Warren’s best, or at least
ones that are historically significant. My ranking of Warren’s top stories has
changed somewhat since I originally posted it years back (see here), and
while I do plan on including in this series posts on those stories that I had
included in my top 10, there are also many others I have interest in featuring
as well. The frequency of posts or how many particular stories I will cover in
a given post I cannot say at this time, and I do overall consider it a rather
open ended initiative; Warren had such a large output that there should be
enough to keep this series going for quite a while.
With
that said, my first feature is going to be on a story that I reread for the
first time in years just within the past few days.
The Wolves at War’s End (Originally
published in Vampirella #43, June 1975)
Art by
Luis Garcia
Story by
Victor Mora and Budd Lewis
Taking place in the aftermath of
the Crusades, this story features a wary soldier who returns to his home village
after a lengthy absence. The village is far different than what he remembers;
he faces jeers from the villagers, the streets absent of children and the
plague having ravished things. Eventually the soldier comes upon his home,
boarded up. His family is mostly dead, with only his sister still alive,
accused by the local villagers as being a sorceress as she was the only one to
survive the plague unscathed. The soldier attacks the villagers, taking off
with his sister into the woods, with the holy men left behind proclaiming they
will pursue them. The soldier and his sister make their way towards the castle
occupied by the family of his lover Elenore. As they sleep in a tree that night
he dreams of seeing Elenore again, only to find her as a skeleton. Wolves have
gathered below the tree, although his sister claims he had simply conjured them
up in his head. Eventually they come across the castle and the soldier heads
inside, finding Elenore alive and unharmed, exactly as he remembered her. The
soldier embraces her lovingly but she soon vanishes; their pursuers have found
them and killed his sister. His sister truly was a sorceress and created the
vision of Elenore, revealed to be long dead as he comes across her grave. The
soldier leaves the castle, and his sister’s body, returning to the woods where
the wolves eventually come upon him again.
The soldier returns to his home village
The
Wolves at War’s End has a rather interesting history and back story behind it.
The story was not a Warren original, but rather was originally published in the
French magazine Pilote under the title “The Winter of the Last Combat”. The
story was part of a series called “The Chronicles of the Nameless” as written
by Victor Mora and drawn by Luis Garcia. The series, across 7 stories told of a
being that explored the lives of different individuals across various times and
places. Other stories in the series featured a contemporary comic book artist,
a woman in an old west brothel, a downed World War I pilot and others. Warren
would purchase the rights to 4 of these stories (along with one additional
Garcia/Mora collaboration) and publish them in Vampirella in 1975. In all cases
the stories were rewritten by regular Warren writers including Budd Lewis,
Gerry Boudreau and editor Bill Dubay.
“The
Winter of the Last Combat” appears to be the most well regarded of the stories
in this series, and ended up also being reprinted in Heavy Metal magazine in
issues published in February and March 1978. This version appears to be a more
accurate translation of the original story and is properly credited (it should
be noted that when Warren published the story, Victor Mora was not credited at
all and Garcia was miscredited as Jose instead of Luis). Reading this version
identifies several key differences with the version published in Vampirella. In
particular the sorceress character was not actually the soldier’s sister. Also
the wolves were not simply imagined up by the soldier but were real, and
originally attracted to the area by the men pursuing him. We also get a better
explanation of why these men disappear at the end of the story, they
were only pursuing the “sorceress”, and they ended up getting killed by the
wolves, the fate that the soldier suffers himself as the story comes to a
close. Budd Lewis also adds in a lot of musings about war which wasn’t in the
original story. In a way this reminds me much of the series he had written shortly beforehand for Eerie, “Apocalypse” which examines the Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse, War, Famine, Plague and Death. In fact it comes off as if The
Wolves at War’s End is building on themes explored in the first three stories
of that series and I think in a way is a good companion piece to it.
Warren
evidently liked this story quite a bit, as a mere two issues later in
Vampirella #45 we get an extremely similar story titled “The Winter of Their
Discontent” as written by Gerry Boudreau and drawn by Isidro Mones. This story
also features a soldier returning home to find his village ravished by the
plague and the villagers showing no respect or appreciation for him. His parent
dead, he searches for his sister, eventually finding that too she has died from
the plague. Unlike the Wolves at War’s End, his lover is still alive and in
good health, but feels so devastated by what has happened that she has no
desire to live any longer. She requests he kill her, which he reluctantly does
before committing suicide himself.
This
story is considerably acclaimed by David Roach, one of the co-writers of the
Warren Companion, who rated it as his #2 Warren story of all time, behind only “Thrillkill”
which by general consensus is the most acclaimed story Warren would publish.
Richard Arndt also expressed praise of the story in his book “Horror Comics in
Black and White”. I personally rated this as my #3 Warren story back when I
rated my top 10 stories. It possesses arguably the strongest artwork to appear
in a Warren story, at least for my tastes (as one who considers Garcia his
favorite Warren artist). Garcia provides a dark and frightening atmosphere that
really fits the nature of the story well, particularly after the soldier
escapes into the woods. Lewis enhances what was already a strong story with his
changes and dialogue. I particularly enjoy the final lines, “In my search for
justice I created war. In my search for war, I created death. In my search for
death… I have lost my soul.”
Hey Q!
ReplyDeleteSince you've spent quite a lot of time sharing your thoughts with us over on the Warren Report blog, I thought I'd reciprocate. I tend not to look at your views on these things as I don't want your insightful comments to pepper my own. I'd rather be wrong than a plagiarist! Anyhow, coincidentally I was reading Vampi #43 for a post that will go up in a few weeks and I just had to jump over here to see what you made of "The Easter Bunny Murders!" by Boudreau. (I may be the only one who saw this as a goofy parody of Warren horror) That's when I found out you'd resurrected A Very Creepy Blog! Congrats. I'm looking forward to diving into the posts we've already covered. One question: do you have an index somewhere on here that helps us find a particular issue quickly?
Thanks for stopping by! "The Easter Bunny Murders" I'll give credit to for such a ridiculous concept, a killer mutant bunny man, although the story's rather abrupt ending was disappointing. Alas, when I originally covered Warren's output years back, I never centrally indexed things; if anything it is probably easiest to find any issue you're looking for by doing a Google search for it. That's what I have to do myself!
ReplyDeleteHey, a little late re-visiting your blog.
ReplyDeleteIf you care, the origin of these stories by Mora and Garcia, began when Garcia left Warren and along with some other Spanish artists decided to visit the French publishers. The best-selling comics magazine at the time was Pilote (this is prior to Métal Hurlnat). The Spanish artists showed their work to the magaztine's editor, René Goscinny, writer-creator of the popular 'Asteric' series, and from all the artists, Goscinnny picked Garcia.
He later told him, in perfect Spanish, "You are the best artist I've evver seen," and told him he could pick any writer and start working for them. Garcia preferred working with a Spnaish writer to avoid any conflicts with translations, and chose Victor Mora, who was considered a top writer in Spain having created the popular 'Capitan Trueno' series in the 1950s.
From their collabortaion came this first series of stories 'Tales of the Unnamed' (I'm translating from the original Spanish and French versions). When Gposcinny received the first story he told Garcia that he would have to pay him more than the other artists because his work so good.
In the 1980s Garcia put together a comics journal together with Josep Maria Bea called 'Rambla' where all the artists retained the rights over their work. A nice idea, the problem is that artists are bad managers, and the magazine went bankruot after a year or two.
He now teaches art, and there is a video on youtube where you see him do a painting from scratch in front of his students.
As to why did Goscinny speak perfect Spanish -— he had lived as a child in Argentina. In the 1950s he moved to New York and worked with Harvey Kurtzman, who offered to translate one of the first series he created with Uderzo (artist of Asterix), 'Oum Pah Pah', and try an sell it in the America market. Unfortunately no one in America was interested in the series, and it eventually appeared in Pilote when both Uderzo and Goscinny participated in the creation of the journal at the end of the 1950s.