They also feel all shiny because they tend
to be packed with great one-off stories featuring classic 2000ad characters by
the very best creators, mixed in with the launch of important new storylines,
with enough room left over for a few brave stabs at all new stuff. It’s in
these special issues that you find things like Morrison and Yeowell doing a
one-off Zenith, or Mills and O’Neill putting the final cap on the twisting
Nemesis saga.
I was a little let down by Prog 2011 a year
ago – largely due to the lack of John Wagner and/or Nikolai Dante – but I was
still looking forward to 2012. I intentionally ignored anything about the
comic, but I still knew this one would have Wagner and Dante, and a lot more
besides.
Happily, Prog 2012 is the best of these
year-end things in… well…. years. While the usual ratio of quality in a regular
2000ad comic remains the same – two exceptional strips, two okay ones, and one
terrible story – Prog 2012 has eight stories and three of them are gruddamn
brilliant, four of them are pretty damn good, and only one is real rubbish.
That’s a decent ratio.
Judge
Dredd
Choose
Your Own Xmas by Al Ewing and John Higgins
The only bad thing to say about Choose Your
Own Xmas is that it sets an impossibly high standard for the rest of the comic,
because it’s easily the best thing in it.
As the title suggests, it’s a Choose Your
Own Adventure-type thing, that laces in extra doses of irony and metatextual
fun – this ain’t no Diceman. While the main character bounces around the
66-panels of the 12 page story, dying again and again, it took me a while to
notice that Judge Dredd has a more linear path through the story, with just
enough science fiction bollocks to explain what is actually going on, and why
Jackson Packard has so many different fates.
Much of the story’s humour comes from a
time-honoured Dredd technique where the main character realises he is in a
story, and can hear the narrator in the caption box, or starts seeing these
weird balloons with words in them hovering over other characters’ heads, and
the whole story has just the right mix of dead cleverness, droll wit and
exploding heads to make it one of the great Dredd holiday stories.
It also has some lovely art from John
Higgins, with his usual stylish stiffness boosted by some terrific colouring.
But it’s mainly the clever scripting by Ewing that makes this story an instant classic and gets Prog 2012 off to
the best possible start.
Absalom
Sick
Leave by Gordon Rennie and Tiernen Trevallion
Absalom is a strong, fast-paced piece of
cockney horror noir, and Rennie isn’t shy about showing the love to his
influences with the main character sitting around talking about his old mates
Jack Regan, Charlie Barlow and ‘that Irish git who was involved in all that
zombie mess us Manchester way’.
Absalom’s observation that he is the last
of the old guard gives the story more of an emotional kick than expected, and
Trevallion’s art is as spooky as ever, with the whole strip a nice combination
of working class magick and some crazy hardcore demonic action.
Nikolai
Dante
The
Wedding of Jena Makarov by Robbie Morrison and Simon Fraser
Dante is down in the dungeon again, the
world is being told that nobody is too cool to kill, and I don’t think his Mum
is going to get out of this one.
On the other hand, Elena is already wiping
blood of her blade, and I’m still convinced Lulu is on Nikolai’s side and her
betrayal is all part of the plan.
I am breathlessly excited about the direction
the Nikolai Dante stories are heading in.
Aquila
Prologue
by Gordon Rennie and Leigh Gallagher
I'm embarrassed to admit it took me six
pages to realise this story about a Nubian warrior in the Roman army who has
had his soul stripped from him was a new version of Blackhawk.
Grey
Area
Meet
& Greet by Dan Abnett and Karl Richardson
Grey Area was – unfortunately – the one
strip in this bumper comic that I really didn’t like. It was the one that did
nothing for me, full of all that faux machismo of all the dullest 2000ad
characters.
It’s a story about aliens in a Earth-based
ghetto, and the hard-nosed humans who police the alien zone, seen through the
eyes of a young female rookie who seems a bit naïve, but probably has something
to hide, and I’m sure I’ve read this story a dozen times before. Even the
gritted teeth and ridiculous air in Richardson’s art is
horribly familiar.
To be honest, I’m not sure it isn’t just a
pisstake and I’m not getting the joke. It has lines like “I WANT to scare you,
honey. You NEED to be scared. Or you won’t last to WEEK TWO.” and “Bulliet? I
thought you died!” “Nah, I got better.”
This… this can’t be serious, can it?
Dandridge
A
Christmas Ghost Story by Alec Worley and Jon Davis-Hunt
This relatively new strip is always a bit
too formal, but has a sly sense of wit and some surprisingly creepy moments, so
more is always welcome. It’s also one of those classic 2000ad concepts that
lends itself to short, sharp and shocking one-off stories, which is what it
goes for here, and largely succeeds.
Sinister
Dexter
Now
& Again by Dan Abnett and Anthony Williams
This strip is usually dead average for me -
even though it’s been popular enough to keep running since the late nineties,
I’ve only really loved it when things broke down into Downlode Tales and people
like Chris Weston and Sean Phillips were doing the art.
But Dan Abnett (despite the depressingly
routine Grey Area) is still a smart
writer, and manages to do a Sinister Dexter story that advances its achingly
long plot, while still celebrating the history of the comic, getting in special
guest appearances from Dredd, Nikolai, Johnny & Wulf and Abnett’s own Gene
The Hackman.
Like the Absalom shout-outs, there’s
nothing wrong with this kind of cheap thrill, when you’re in the mood for
celebration, even if the Stonts meeting the Gunsharks was a bit too clever for its own good.
Strontium
Dog
The
Life and Death of Johnny Alpha – Chapter Two: The Project by JohN wagner and
Carlos Ezquerra
Forget about Johnny, Middenface is alive! Ho’d
ontae yer breeks, Middenface McNulty is still alive!
2000ad got into a good groove towards the
end of 2011, with Dredd going somewhere Important with a capital Eye and the
most recent series of both Low Life and Indigo Prime proving to be quietly
spectacular. Prog 2012 was a fitting end to the year.
And that’s another year of 2000ad done, and
another to come. There is a lot to look forward to, including the Zaucer of Zilk by the legendary Brendan
McCarthy and that man Ewing, Nikolai Dante’s self-prophesied (and independently
verified) spectacular end is coming, and I would not be surprised if the latest
Dredd mega-epic is the one that will finally finish the old man. Not knowing
what comes next is a real joy, and it’s a nice feeling to be a bit over-eager
about these things.
Looking forward to the future is the only
way to face it.
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