Posts Tagged ‘Gil Kane’

REVIEW: An Ominous Dream, Thoth Amon & A Sea Serpent

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Welcome to The Classic Conan Countdown, a series of reviews focusing on the original 275 issues of Marvel Comics’ Conan the Barbarian, which were published from 1970 to 1993. This is a review of Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #74.)

Thoth-Amon, considered to be the Cimmerian’s greatest enemy, visits Conan in his dreams.  He warns Conan against rescuing Belit’s father, the true King of Asgalun.  The evil sorcerer shows Conan a vision of Belit’s ship, The Tigress, engulfed in flames as a foreshadowing should Conan and Belit go on this quest to rescue her father. Awakening from his dream, or nightmare, Conan goes topside and comforts his brooding lover. Their conversation is cut short when a Stygian ship is spotted. After a short battle, the crew of the Tigress overcomes the crew of the Stygian ship and they burn it. 


The Stygian crew is questioned but none of them gives up any information or secrets about the Stygian capital of Luxur. One of the captive Stygians even commits suicide. All is not lost however as a slave girl named Neftha agrees to show the crew of the Tigress  how to get into the royal palace in exchange for her freedom. Here is where the bulk of the story takes place, off the coast of Stygia and the port city of Khemi.  Most of Belit’s crew get into longboats and row their way into the port city of Khemi. The city is seemingly unguarded because of a festival honoring Set but then a giant serpent attacks! Conan comes to Belit’s rescue, killing the beast on his own with his bare hands and blade, further cementing his reputation as Amra.

Safe from the beast, the pirates of the Tigress burn the Stygians warships but chaos ensues anyway, M’Gora leads most of Belit’s and Conan’s crew back to TheTigress . As for Conan and Belit, they stay behind with Neftha in the port city of Khemi and begin to make their way to Luxur. 

CAPSULE REVIEW: There’s nothing amazing about the story and the writing but the artwork is outstanding, almost every page is eye candy. There is marked improvement on Ernie Chan’s (a/k/a Ernie Chua) embellishments on John Buscema’s pencils.

It’s probably one of their best collaborations on a single issue ever. Every panel is full of background or foreground work, with rich texture and lush inks, and the issue is lavishly colored by George Roussos. The splash page is beautifully rendered but in turning the page there is a greater treat in a double page masterpiece by the artists.  It’s a fine issue with beasts, brains, brawn, and beauties. I give an 8 out of 10.

“And this story shall also be told.” –The Wizard in Conan The Barbarian

– Dean Plakas

REVIEW: A Psychotic Queen, A Slave Girl & A Dead Lover

By JOESEPH SIMON – PM Library Associate Editor

Things are beginning to change, and Conan the Barbarian #12 perhaps foreshadows things to come, and not all of them are good. Gil Kane’s art graces the cover, and there is even a back-up story featuring his work. The creative staff for the Conan story remains the same.

I have some things to say about Barry Windsor-Smith’s art towards the end of my review … until then, what about Roy Thomas’ writing?

According to sources, including the Barry-Windsor Smith Conan Archives Vol. 2, author Roy Thomas indicates that this 16-page Conan story was originally Windsor-Smith’s tryout artwork for the comic book. That explains much of why the content in my opinion seems “off” from the rest of the series thus far. In addition, the story was cobbled together when Conan was returned to regular size from being an “over-sized” comic in terms of page count. 

Review: Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #12

The issue begins as Conan is being attacked. Apparently, he dared to drink from the Springs of Zahmahn without “paying tribute to the queen!” Conan is no one to bully, even if he is sporting an odd garment that looks like a shift made of strips of cloth hanging down from some sort of neck lining.

Conan puts up a fight, but much like Batman of old, he’s knocked on the noggin and goes down for the count. The odds were admittingly against him and Conan doesn’t seem as bloodthirsty here as he is full of verbiage and bravado.

With Conan unconscious, we discover that the Queen’s paramour was killed without her knowledge. The guard here decides that Conan is the perfect scapegoat, imagining that she will have Conan flayed alive and the real murderer will never be discovered. 

Our Cimmerian is presented to the queen, who asks Conan if she should condemn him to the flayer’s knife. Conan replies “I say – loose my bonds and hand me a sword – and I’ll not walk the road to hell alone.”

Queen Fatima concludes that  Conan has courage, remarking that her own countrymen have little. She orders Yaila, a slave girl, to “fill that wine flagon” for Conan. Fatima puts forth that she needs a new captain now that her old one is dead and asks if the barbarian might be up to it. Conan replies that he “makes no bargains” while his hands are tied.

Conan is unbound and introduces himself by name, taking his wine. Yaila offers to take the new captain to his palace quarters, but the queen indicates a negative, demanding that Yaila keep her “cloying hands” away from Conan. Fatima talks in the third person, indicating perhaps that she is not all together. She tells all to leave and that Fatima will see Conan to his rooms. Why rooms instead of room? She speaks in third person, so I suppose I shouldn’t suspect anything less.

We next see Conan and Fatima treading familiar ground (reminiscent of his relationship with Jenna) arguing about the slave girl and then being intimate. Before things can get R-rated, a passage of time is noted. In fact, we’re told weeks have now passed.

Conan knows he is being watched, and decides to test the boundaries of his new position. Upon trying to exit the palace, he’s stopped by guards who claim the queen has instructed to kill him should he attempt to leave – then they mock him, calling him the palace dog.

The barbarian makes his way to the royal bath chamber, where the slave girl Yaila is washing up. She says that as the queen’s handmaid, she’s priveliged to use the royal bath. She then taunts Conan, rubbing in the source of his anger – “You think of yourself as Captain of the Queen’s Guard, but you are that in name only!” I guess Conan won’t be getting a good reference from this job for future employment.

Things escalate quickly, as Yaila somewhat successfully attempts to seduce Conan, just in time for Queen Fatima and the palace guard to barge in.

Fatima declares that Conan signed his own death warrant the moment he touched another. Conan, never at a loss for words, says, “You call me a savage, even as you condemn me for nothing? Better a swift death than the fiery embrace of a mad woman.”

Conan and Yaila are bound and left in a corridor with water that reaches Conan’s waist. They are left do die at the hands of the Dweller in the Dark.

How will Conan and Yaila survive the Lovecraft-inspired monster of Queen Fatima? And should they survive, can they take on Queen Fatima and the palace guards? Let me know what you think of this story in the comments section below.

CAPSULE REVIEW: The ending of this comic is much better than the beginning. I will summarize the end of the story by simply saying, “Better luck next time, Charlie Brown.” Conan does do a solid for someone special, even if he leaves at the end of the issue suffering sour grapes.

Other than the ending, I spent much of my time reading this issue wondering, “what just happened?” Conan is set up by the palace guards. Then he becomes their boss, in name only, and he is there for weeks on end, yet he’s constantly mocked and seems to have won the respect of no one.

Only the characters of Conan, Yaila and Fatima are even on a first-name basis until the end of the story.   I have great respect for Barry Windsor-Smith’s art, but there are some things in this issue that just can’t be ignored. Conan’s initial garb, while cool looking, was impractical. Yaila and Fatima are both drawn as unattractive. The Dweller in the Dark is not consistent in size nor in levels of intimidation.

Knowing that this story was based on pieces of initial art and Windsor-Smith’s application process was a relief, and explains many of my concerns about the issue. It really is a shame, as the only thing I enjoyed in this issue was the ending. I rate it a 5 out of 10