Thursday, July 21, 2016

Comic Relief Comic #1


Originally published by: Fleetway
Publication date: March, 1991

Plot: Richard Curtis, Neil Gaiman and Grant Morrison
Script: ?
Art: ?

"Teenage Mutant Something Turtles"

Summary:

The hosts of the Comedy Relief charity drive introduce their next guests, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.  Or is it the Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles?  As the two hosts bicker over the name, Splinter takes the mic.
 

Down in the sewer lair, Splinter gathers his pupils to show them a mind-over-body discipline he took years to master.  Through decades of practice, he reveals that he's able to turn his nose red at will.

Leonardo, Raphael and Michelangelo marvel at the technique, but lament that they wouldn't be able to master it no matter how hard they tried, seeing as they don't have noses to begin with.  Donatello has an epiphany, and borrowing Raph's sais, he messily chops a pizza to pieces.  The sauce splatters onto their beaks, giving the Turtles the appearance of red noses.
 

Unfortunately, the "noses" are too tasty to resist and the Turtles proceed to lick the sauce off and then reapply it, making a huge mess.  Splinter informs the audience that an easier and cleaner method of mastering the technique would be to go out and buy a Comic Relief red nose.  He then introduces the next segment, something about "Africa".


Turtle Tips:

*Special thanks to "Wilddiverse" of The Technodrome Forums for sharing the TMNT pages of this special with me.

*This special was published as part of a charity drive coordinated by the Comic Relief foundation.  The red clown noses seen in the story were also available for sale, with proceeds going to the charity.

*This special contained a staggering number of licensed characters from different rights holders, many of which I've never heard of.  Titles involved include Batman, Superman, the Incredible Hulk, Dan Dare, Doctor Who, Judge Dredd, Dennis the Menace, Beano, RoboCop, Blackadder, and maybe more.

*The credits page lists everyone involved in the special, but does not distinguish who did what.  Curtis, Gaiman and Morrison are credited with the special's plot, but the individual script writers, artists, colorists and letterers are all lumped together, so I dunno who wrote or drew the TMNT story in particular.

*Oddly, Kevin Eastman is given a special thanks credit but Peter Laird is not.


Review:

Apparently, this thing is legendary.  But I'm not British, so this is the first I've heard of it.

The credits page for the special is pretty unique, featuring a butler announcing all the creators in a verbose manner whilst being yelled at by his master, "Mr. Blackadder" (like, from the TV series?  I don't know).  It's a neat gimmick, but it also means that I can't tell who wrote or drew what.  The credits might have been intuitive to anyone reading all the British publications included in this special at the time, but with Fleetway constantly using different creators on their licensed TMNT comic, it's not so easy to determine who did what by name alone.

Apparently, this special included strips by every big name working in the UK comics scene at the time.  Gaiman, Ennis, Morrison, Millar, Bisley, McKean... Pretty much every big UK name except Alan "Comic Books Were a Mistake" Moore, who was probably too grouchy to participate in something as mollycoddling and saccharine as a charity.

The two-page TMNT story is, I dunno, kinda dumb?  But it was a quick gag strip amid what I assume was a comic made up entirely of such things, so it probably fit in just fine when context is accounted for.  The story opens with the hosts arguing over whether they're called the "Ninja Turtles" or the "Hero Turtles", which was a relevant issue at the time.  The UK has since abandoned their ban on the word "ninja" (and the frightful concept of nunchakus), so it's a non-issue, now.

Anyway, I sort of feel like I'm missing out, only having the TMNT pages to read, but I'm grateful to have them over nothing.  The lineup of creators is pretty enticing; some of them during their prime (Gaiman), some when they were just starting to hit their stride (Ennis) and some several years before they hit it big (Millar).  I don't know if the thing goes for big bucks on the aftermarket, but I assume it does, given how it likely won't ever be reprinted due to all the varying rights issues.

I guess I'll never know what happens in that RoboCop strip.