Blackhawk (Tornado)

Blackhawk was a comic strip appearing on the British magazine Tornado, created by Gerry Finley-Day. It was one of three strips to transfer from Tornado to 2000 AD after the two merged.

Blackhawk
Character information
First appearanceTornado #4 (April 1979)
Publication information
PublisherIPC Magazines
ScheduleWeekly
FormatsOriginal material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology(s) Tornado and 2000 AD.
Genre
Creative team
Writer(s)Tornado
Gerry Finley-Day
2000 AD
Alan Grant/Kelvin Gosnell as "Alvin Gaunt"
Artist(s)Tornado
Alfonso Azpiri
2000 AD
Massimo Belardinelli
Ramon Sola
Joe Staton
Greg Guler
Reprints
Collected editions
BlackhawkISBN 1-907992-59-6

Plot synopsis

At the time of the Roman Empire a Nubian slave rises up against his captors and leads a rebellion. However his bravery is recognised by a Roman General and he is commissioned as a Roman Centurion. Blackhawk took his name from a Hawk that he adopted and assembled a crack platoon from hardened prisoners and other slaves. As with other Finley-Day war stories the basic plot was borrowed from The Dirty Dozen with Blackhawk's squad being singled out for the hardest missions.

In 2000 AD he is taken from his Roman captors by an alien species only to be entered into their own intergalactic gladiatorial events against other alien species. Blackhawk adopts a Wookiee type alien as a sidekick (ironically the Hawk that gave him his name was left behind on earth). Blackhawk manages to escape but ends up stranded on a planet orbiting a black hole. Here a creature called "The SoulSucker" removes Blackhawks soul and he pursues the SoulSucker relentlessly, eventually regaining it shortly before the end of the series run.

Eventually, Tharg the Mighty's race were written in, as a robotic "Kwark" created by the "Thargians", and the whole cast were sucked into a black hole. They are later seen in Tharg's desk drawer, full of other dead or discarded characters, where Blackhawk complains how long they have been waiting as Ace Garp is selected for a revival.[1]

In the 2000 AD Yearbook 1994 it was acknowledged by the editor that this was a poor series, and Alan Grant had written himself into a corner.

Characters

  • Blackhawk
  • Ursa
  • Batak
  • Zog

Bibliography

Collected editions

All the stories are collected in one trade paperback:

  • Blackhawk (288 pages, November 2011, ISBN 1-907992-59-6)

Notes

  1. "Whatever Happened to... Ace Garp?" in 2000 AD #451, January 1986
gollark: If god's plan explains whatever happens retroactively, it is entirely useless as a model to explain anything.
gollark: That really just sounds like, er, post-hoc justification which explains literally nothing.
gollark: But you just said you were going to shop A.
gollark: God conveniently acts in ways indistinguishable from random chance.
gollark: You know, in a sense, god is uncool.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.