DC Comics
Haunted Tank #1
By Andy Frisk February 8, 2009 - 07:46
Publisher(s): DC Comics
Vertigo
Writer(s): Frank Marraffino
Penciller(s): Henry Flint
Inker(s): Henry Flint
Colourist(s): Lee Loughridge
Letterer(s): Travis Lanham
Cover Artist(s): Koe Kubert, Henry Flint
$2.99 US
DC’s Vertigo line has a long history of
presenting old ideas and stories from the DC cannon in new and interesting
ways. With the new Haunted Tank
mini-series, Vertigo continues this tradition.
In this newest incarnation General Jeb Stuart comes to the rescue of
Tank Commander Jamal Stuart’s crew, engaged in military operations circa 2003 Iraq. What is quickly revealed is that Gen. Jeb
Stuart’s charge, as before, in his ghostly afterlife is to “assist mah
descendents in battle” and that in this instance the former Confederate General
and possibly, one time slave owner’s descendent appears to be the tank’s
African-American commander. At first the
two declare there is a “mistake” but as the story unfolds and Jeb saves the
crew again a reluctant acceptance on Jamal’s part is made and the tank, with
its ghostly guardian, set off together to rejoin their unit and find their way
out the Iraqi desert they have gotten lost in.
At
first this new incarnation of Haunted Tank appears rife with cliché and
obvious, predictable tension. A
Confederate General’s descendent turns out to be an African American, hence
drama ensues. A closer look though, at
the developing and unfolding story with its tensions, racial and otherwise,
demonstrate the great potential the series has to actually address some serious
and potentially provocative issues.
Take
for instance the dialogue between the tank’s crew. We get two famous movie one liners dropped by
the tank’s Specialist, Johnson, upon first seeing Jeb: “we’ve been slimed!” and “game over
man!” (I can hear Bill Paxton’s whine ringing
while the wreckage of the Sulacco’s drop ship burns). The pop culture influences on the denizens of
“The Imperialist Satan’s” tank crew is obvious as we all, as products of
American movies, have scores of one liners stored up for use at any convenient
time necessary to prove our coolness. A
few pages earlier though, we get a scene of a pickup truck full of Iraqi
soldiers advancing on our Haunted Tank in which one of the soldiers yells out
“I would like to see Montana,” some
famous words from Captain 2nd Rank Vasily Borodin aboard the Red
October, just before their defection. It
appears that the difference between the Iraqi soldiers and the American ones,
as far as the knowledge and one must assume, viewing of the “Imperialist
Satan’s” Hollywood flicks, is not so
great. This knowledge of films and
interchange of pop cultural references and their use hints that there may be
more similarities between the Americans and their Iraqi enemies that might be,
not so comfortably, explored in the next few issues.
We
also have the racial diversity of the, now haunted, tank’s crew. Chop-Chop is of Korean descent and refers to
the bedouins crossing the desert as “sand people” (if you don’t get this
reference then shame on you for even reading comics!) in a derogatory fashion
while a few minutes later the tank’s “I’m not French” French named Beauregard
suggest rounding up all the Iraqis and throwing them into camps like “we did to
Chop-Chop’s people in the 40’s” to which Chop-Chop replies, “I’m Korean
asshole!”
So,
we have an American Tank composed of a racially mixed group: a Korean, a
Southern Redneck, an African American, and a dubiously “not French” French
American named Beauregard, all assisted by the Ghost of a Confederate General
of the Old South, all of which display some type of racial bias or at least
tension, against not only their Iraqi enemies but between themselves. Mix all of this together and drop in the,
perhaps now not so clichéd relationship that will have to be developed between
Jamal and Jeb as they attempt to progress thought the war with their skins, of
whatever color, intact, and we can really say that “drama will ensue.” I for
one can’t wait to see where all this tension takes us over the course of the
next four issues. You shouldn’t wait
either.