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Such a Man is Blackhawk: Then and Now

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Published on June 15, 2011

Reader’s Guide to the new DC Universe: Blackhawks
Reader’s Guide to the new DC Universe: Blackhawks

As part of their relaunched line of comics, DC has announced a new Blackhawks series, recasting the classic WWII-era team of aviators as an “elite group of mercenaries made up of brave men from around the world equipped with the latest in cutting-edge hardware and vehicles.”

Blackhawk and his team of, well, Blackhawks, may not be as familiar as most of the DC superhero characters—or even anywhere near the same league as DC’s iconic war hero Sgt. Rock—but the Blackhawk and his pals have been around for seventy years, in one incarnation or another, weathering the ever-changing winds of a fickle readership.

Perhaps that’s too strong of a statement about the endurance of the Blackhawks, because they have never been top-tier characters, even when their stories were written and drawn by some of the best creators in the comic book industry. Maybe it’s safer to say that the out-of-the-spotlight Blackhawk comics are surprising exemplars of how things have changed over the decades. Maybe we can say that an effective way to track trends and tendencies in American comics since 1941 would be to tell the story of Blackhawk and company over the years. Blackhawk, and his international team of freedom fighters, represents the course of American history. Or at least the course of American comic book history from the 1940s until today.

Yeah, let’s say that. I feel good about that. As bad as that course may be.

Blackhawk debuted in August 1941’s Military Comics #1, in an eleven-page strip written by godfather of American comics Will Eisner and Bob Powell and drawn by Chuck Cuidera. In typical pre-Pearl Harbor yet itching-for-interventionism fashion (like Marvel’s Captain America Comics #1), the first Blackhawk story dealt explicitly with the hunger to punch Nazis in the face, or at least throw them around like rag dolls and then shoot them in the gut.

In that opening tale, we learn about a “stranger” in Poland who sees his family killed by Captain Von Tepp, a no-good Nazi, and then, one lengthy middle-of-the-page caption later, we find out about “a name that strikes terror in the hearts of men…Blackhawk.”

Blackhawk and his men, who warn enemies of their arrival by singing, “over land, over sea, we fight to make men free, of danger we don’t care, we’re Blackhawks!” are a kind of international wartime vigilante squadron of fighter pilots.

Not surprisingly, that stranger with the tragic past from the first pages of the story in Military Comics #1 turns out to be…Blackhawk himself.

That basically means that Blackhawk is a wartime Batman, with the same archetypal origin of slain family members and a quest for vengeance, and even an echo of the “strikes terror into the hearts” line from “criminals are a superstitious, cowardly lot” caption from Batman’s own origin story. Except Blackhawk doesn’t wear a cape and cowl. He wears black leather leather military garb. And he doesn’t have a cave full of gadgets. He has an island full of gadgets. And he doesn’t have a boy sidekick. He has a squad of sidekicks, one of whom is an incredibly racist Asian caricature called “Chop-Chop.”

Well done, Will Eisner! Plopping Batman down in wartime Europe and making him a fighter pilot with 100% more racism in the stories.

Eisner, for all his amazing achievements in visual storytelling in his Spirit comics and, later, popularizing the idea of a “serious” approach to graphic novels with A Contract with God and beyond, is also the guy who wrote and drew dozens and dozens of stories featuring Ebony White.

The Golden Age Blackhawk stories are typical of their era, with their overt racism (even the international cast is not much more than walking stereotypes, and the supposedly polish Blackhawk acts more like a lantern-jawed American movie icon than anything else), their reliance on a nine-panel grid page layout (which does open up into more interesting possibilities when artist Reed Crandall takes over in the second year of the strip’s existence), and their simplistic approach to politics and morality.

The Blackhawk stories aren’t stodgy, though, and Eisner’s dexterous hand is apparent, even though he’s not credited as penciler on any of the early stories. But his influence permeates the book, and I can only assume he helped with layouts or put the finishing touches on a few panels here and there, because of so many Eisner signature images: the bedraggled hero, with torn clothing, leaning on a young woman for support; bird’s eye, three-quarter views of architecture, with shadows looming large; underground bunkers and alleyways, with the Eisneresque circular windows; and even some of the panels of floating heads or the crosshatching on the folds in clothes. It may be the Eisner studio look more than the direct hand of Eisner himself, but the two become almost inseparable during that era of comics.

The Blackhawk strip continued as the main feature in Military Comics for the next decade, and also spun off into its own, self-titled comic, which lasted (after some stops and restarts along the way) until 1984’s Blackhawk #273.

Like most war comics, Blackhawk was never able to shake its period setting, even though some noble and not-so-noble attempts were made to update the series for the contemporary audience at the time. The most infamous of the attempted updates was 1967’s “Junk-Heap Heroes” by Bob “Hepcat” Haney and Dick “I Drew the JLA For Years” Dillin. Haney and Dillin recast the Blackhawks as high-tech costumed superheroes. It’s a concept that didn’t stick with the wartime aviators.

The best of the updates had to be Howard Chaykin’s three-issue prestige format Blackhawk miniseries from 1988, which kept the period setting but, filtered through Chaykin’s post-American Flagg!, post-revamped Shadow visual style and idiosyncratic fetishes, gave us a fresh look at well-tread ground. It was certainly unlike any version of Blackhawk that had come in the 47 years prior, even though many of the outward trappings looked similar. The planes and the pilots and the heroism vs. Nazis was still present, but the morality was murkier, the whole thing layered with power struggles and an overt conflict between appearance and reality. Simply put, Chaykin’s brief Blackhawk series is a startling good comic book—one that I would consider underrated if I didn’t personally rate it so high whenever the topic arises.

The Chaykin version of the character continued into the 1990s, alongside costumed superheroes in Action Comics Weekly and as a series all its own, but with Marty Pasko and Rick Burchett instead of Chaykin providing the scripts and artwork. It just wasn’t the same, even if the concepts followed logically from what Chaykin had established as the new status quo for the Blackhawk team.

Since the 1988 Chaykin series, the only interesting thing done with the Blackhawks (beyond a few guest appearances in some animated Justice League episodes and an occasional minor role in a comic book) was done as a pastiche. In Alan Moore and Gene Ha’s 2004 graphic novel, Top 10: The Forty-Niners, the Blackhawks appear, recast as the “Skysharks,” complete with a shark logo where the hawk logo would have gone.

The Moore and Ha graphic novel was written as a prologue to their Top 10 series, a strip in which comic book archetypes populate the city of Neopolis, and the police force is composed almost entirely of superheroes, but the Skysharks, one in particular, play an integral role in The Forty-Niners. Ultimately, the book is a gay love story set in a comic book landscape of the past. Like the Chaykin Blackhawk series, it makes the subtext that could never be addressed in the original Will Eisner stories (the sexuality, in particular) an explicit part of the text. And if you were to only read two Blackhawk stories in your life, you couldn’t do any better than the Chaykin miniseries and this Moore/Ha collaboration.

But now there’s this new Blackhawks series debuting in September, a comic that’s clearly abandoning the trappings of any previous incarnation entirely in an attempt to recruit a new crop of readers. From the cover image, writer Mike Costa and artist Ken Lashley are giving us a squad that’s like the A-Team mashed into Nick Fury and his agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

If they’re smart, they’ll keep the Batman essence of the Will Eisner original, because “The Out-of-Costume Batman and his Squad of High-Tech Military Heroes” is probably a much more marketable concept than my favorite Blackhawk stories mentioned above.

Just as all the other incarnations of the Blackhawks were products of their era, this one is as well. Or, like all entertainment artifacts, it reflects what the company thinks the fans of the time would want, and it remains to be seen how well they respond to this seemingly direct, unsophisticated approach to military action comics. It’s a return to the new good old days, when Nazis were meant for punchin’ and islands were meant for secret bases filled with the coolest hero-but-not-superhero gear. It’s a classic take on Blackhawk, really, just with contemporary hairstyles and fashion.

And one with, we hope, substantially less racism than the original.


Tim Callahan has read several comics. In a row. He also writes for Comic Book Resources every week. He likes it when you follow him on Twitter and ask him questions, because it gives him an excuse not to do whatever it is he’s supposed to be doing at the time.

About the Author

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Tim Callahan

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In addition to writing about comics for Tor.com, Tim writes the weekly "When Words Collide" column at Comic Book Resources and is the author of Grant Morrison: The Early Years and the editor of Teenagers from the Future. He sometimes blogs at geniusboyfiremelon.blogspot.com, although these days he tends to post his fleeting but surely incisive comic book thoughts as TimCallahan on Twitter.
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