The Alien/Predator Comic Strips, Part One
By Jean-François Boivin
The Aliens and Predator licenses have been held by Dark
Horse Comics since 1988 and 1989 (respectively), and several series of each
and/or both franchises have been published over the years. But some
harder-to-find stories were published outside of the regular comics medium either
for promotional reasons, or as crossovers with another publisher, or because
magazines are the medium for comic strips in that country. In this series of
blogs, I will cover all the Aliens
and/or Predator comic strips that
were published in various magazines.
HEAVY METAL
The American comic magazine Heavy Metal debuted in April 1977. It was created by the editors of
National Lampoon as an English
language version of the artistic French publication Métal Hurlant that had started publication more than two years
prior. But Heavy Metal Publications, Inc., soon branched out into publishing some
original graphic novels as part of a Heavy
Metal Presents series* (distributed by Simon & Schuster). In summer of
1979, one of those books was titled Alien:
The Illustrated Story, adapted from the 20th Century Fox movie by Archie
Goodwin and illustrated by Walter Simonson, two giants of the comics industry.
The book came out around the same time as the movie, but to give us a taste, "The
adult illustrated fantasy magazine" presented a two-part preview of the
book at the beginning of their third year of publication, in the May and June
1979 issues of the magazine.
Volume III, No. 1 (whole issue #26) contained the first eight pages of the story starting on page 12, including the big "Alien" title splash page and the Joseph Conrad quote: "We live as we dream—alone." Volume III, No. 2 (whole issue #27) had the next eight pages starting on page 48, and ending with a literal cliffhanger: just when the landing party walk up a rocky rise on LV-426 and gasp in disbelief at what they discover.
To read the following 45 pages you had to buy the book,
which is mentioned in the editorial of both issues and came out around the same
time as Heavy Metal #27. The final
book contains only minor corrections within its first 16 pages that differ from
the magazine preview: mainly, the dialogue spoken over intercoms was now blue,
and the "Alien" from the "Alien: The Illustrated Story"
title was removed from page 9 (because it was redundant with the "Alien"
title on pages 1-2).
Heavy Metal Books also published The Book of Alien, by Paul Scanlon and Michael Gross, at the same
time. Both books were later reprinted in the U.K. by Titan Books, with
different covers: The Book of Alien
in April 1993 and Alien: The Illustrated
Story in September 2012. In October 2012, Titan published Alien: The Illustrated Story—The Original
Art Edition, which consists of the "b/w comic strip, scanned from the
artist's original art boards, plus an in-depth interview with Simonson, the
original script pages, colour tryouts and sketches."
* Early entries
included Psychorock (by Macedo), Arzach (by Moebius), Candice at Sea (by Lob and Pichard), Conquering Armies (by Dionnet and Gal),
Homer's Ulysses (by Lob and Pichard),
Is Man Good? (by Moebius), Theodore
Sturgeon's More Than Human: The Graphic
Story Version (by Doug Moench and Alex Nino), Barbarella (by Jean-Claude Forest) and So Beautiful and So Dangerous (by Angus McKie).
SKELETON CREW
Skeleton Crew started
out in 1988 as a fanzine about "modern horror literature" created by
Dave Hughes in the U.K. The self-published magazine saw moderate success with
its varied content of professional fiction and articles by and about such
respected writers as Clive Barker, Brian Lumley and Ramsey Campbell. After a
couple of years, the magazine was picked up by Argus House which began
publishing it as a professional magazine. The numbering started anew (with
Volume 2, Issue 1 dated July 1990), and the subtitle was now "Portraits of
Horror."
With its second professional issue (cover date: August 1990;
on-sale date: mid-July), the editor (still Dave Hughes) turned his attention to
the Aliens franchise and made an "Aliens-themed" issue. Of interest
was an original two-page comic story (p. 32-33) with a script by Adrien
Rigelsford and art by assistant-editor Lee Brimmicombe-Wood (who would later
write and illustrate articles for Dark Horse International's Aliens Vol. 2 with help from Hughes. The
story contains no dialogue, as it is told from a Xenomorph's point-of-view,
from hatching, to implanting an egg inside a human's throat, to bursting from
the human's chest and escape in the wilderness of what seems to be LV-426. The
alien hides inside what looks like an atmosphere processor and when an alien
queen is burning to death, the alien screams and a title appears: "Do
Aliens Dream?"
Other articles included in this issue (among its regular
dose of horror fiction, articles and reviews) consist of:
- Rigelsford's
early speculations about the upcoming Alien
III (AKA Alien World)
- Alien concept artist Chris Foss writes
about his experiences working on the pre-production of the movie
- Actor
Brian Blessed expressing his love of the Alien movies
- A long
interview with James Cameron about his career by Philip Nutman
- A
review of the Dark Horse Aliens comics
so far (at that point only Book 1
and 2 were available) by Nick
Gillott; the beautiful cover by John Bolton is from Aliens: Earth War #1, which had just come out the month before
- A one-page
parody by Brimmicombe-Wood of Leading Edge Games' Aliens Expansion for their licensed boardgame
That particular issue also reportedly had the editorial
page, a discourse about censorship by editor Hughes, removed at the last minute
and replaced by a magazine subscription advertisement. Some copies of the "banned"
version might have seen circulation.
DARK HORSE INSIDER
The first incarnation of
Dark Horse Insider was a free (it was sold in bundles of 100 copies for $5
to retailers) eight-page, monthly "newspaper" published by Dark Horse
Comics from 1989 to 1991 (in the style of Comic
Shop News). Starting with #14 (Sept. 1990), the strip Aliens: Countdown by Mike Richardson and art by Denis (herein spelled
"Dennis") Beauvais ran for 14 one-page installments until the
penultimate issue #27 (Nov. 1991). Some highlights included one issue that
carried two pages of the strip (#22, May 1991), and an apology by the editor
for past grammatical errors (#23, June-July 1991). This story was only
reprinted one time to date, as a two-part insert comic included with #9-10 of Dark
Horse International's Aliens
Vol. 2, and thus became quite rare. The final issue #28 (Dec. 1991)
contained a two-page preview of the next strip, an Aliens vs. Predator story that would start in Vol. 2 of the
publication.
Note: Missing from the above pic are #16, 20 and 23.
DARK HORSE INSIDER
VOL. 2
In January 1992, Dark Horse updated the format of their
self-promotional publication from a thin newspaper to a comic-sized, 32-page
black-and-white format. It was still free, and still contained some original
comic strips on top of news, previews, interviews and other bits of inside
information. The first strip was Aliens
vs. Predator 2 (initially Aliens vs.
Predator II), written by Randy Stradley and illustrated by Chris Warner.
This was a continuation to the blockbuster 1990 Aliens vs. Predator miniseries (as well as its "epilogue"
in Dark Horse Presents Fifth Anniversary
Special in 1991) by Stradley and Phill Norwood, and shows Machiko as part
of a tribe of Predators on a mission to capture an Alien Queen. The strip
lasted for 14 issues, and was first reprinted (in black and white) in Dark
Horse International's Alien
3 Movie Special #1-3 (Parts 1, 3 and 5) and Aliens Vol. 2 #3-14
(Parts 2, 4 and 6-15), and later in color as Aliens vs. Predator: War #0 a prelude to the sequel miniseries.
This incarnation of
Dark Horse Insider got bumped to 48 pages with #27, then back to 32 in the
later issues until the last one #48 in December 1995. Some other Aliens-related
highlights of the series included previews of Aliens: Hive #1 (in #1), Cyberantics
(in #2), Aliens: Newt's Tale #1 (in
#4), Aliens: Colonial Marines #1 (in
#12) and Aliens: Rogue #1 (in #14).
As a side note, later comic strips included Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi—Ulic Qel-Droma
and the Beast-Wars of Onderon (#15-20), Tales
of the Mask (#21, 23-27 and 29-34), and The
Dirty Pair: "I Honestly Hate You" (#35-36). There was a third
volume of the Insider that lasted for
20 issues from January 1996 to August 1997, but each one consisted of a folded
promotional poster with some release information on the back. That series contained
no exclusive comic strips (that job went to Dark
Horse Extra).
Jean-François (JF) Boivin is currently writing If It Bleeds: The Chronology of the Alien/Predator Universe for Hasslein Books. He collaborated on Echoes of the Jedi—the fourth adventure of the Dawn of Defiance campaign for the Star Wars Roleplaying Game—with Abel G. Peña. He is a founding member of the Star Wars Fanboy Association, and contributes comics reviews for TheForce.Net. Boivin was listed in the acknowledgements for Ann Margaret Lewis' The Essential Guide to Alien Species, as well as Ryder Windham's Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force.
Labels: Alien, Aliens, AvP, Dark Horse, Jean-François Boivin, Predator
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