Recently in Starlord Category

Jim Starlin Star-Lord Painting from Marvel Preview 14

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

Following his friend Berni Wrightson, Jim Starlin also did a Star-Lord piece:

Jim Starlin Star-Lord cover to Marvel Preview 14 1978

This painting appeared on the cover of Marvel Preview #14, 1978.  Starlin painted in this medium (oil? acrylic?) for many covers, portfolios, and series such as Metamorphosis Odyssey.  It’s interesting that Starlin depicted Peter Quill without the helmet and wielding a sword instead of his blaster. 

Ya gotta love that crazy cosmic afro chick in the foreground!  Nuff said.

Claremont, Byrne & Austin’s Classic Take on Star-Lord

| | Comments (1) | TrackBacks (0)

After his first appearance in Marvel Preview #4, what made Marvel decide to take a second shot at Star-Lord?  Were the sales good on that issue, or did the editors see the potential in the Berni Wrightson pinup?

Over a year later, we saw the sequel in Marvel Preview #11 (1977).  With Englehart no longer available to continue as writer, editor John Warner assembled the perfect creative team to revive the character: Chris Claremont, John Byrne, and Terry Austin!  In his editorial, Warner called the creative team (with Tom Orzechowski on letters) magic"Five people forming a perfect and balanced synthesis of concept and execution, each one's contribution enriching the one before it." 

Starlord splash in Marvel Preview 11 1977 by John Byrne and Terry Austin

The splash page opened like an epic movie.  In this one page, we already know the Byrne has figured out the essence of the character that Wrightson pinup showed us.  Marvel Preview #11, like most Marvel magazines, was printed in glorious black and white.  I think the artwork by Byrne and Austin looks superior that way, but just for contrast, I'll show some panels from the 1981 Star-Lord Special Edition comic that reprinted this story in color.

Windholme opening splash in Star-Lord Marvel Preview 11

Like many great films or novels, the story doesn't open on the main character.  The reader is treated to a double page spread of a world called "Windholme" that has been invaded by an enslaving alien race.  We are introduced to two supporting characters: Kip, a native who has psychic abilities, and Sandy, a young woman with street smarts and good at hand to hand combat.  Take a look at the detail on the first half of this page--Byrne and Austin knocked themselves out drawing this scene as the humans are corralled into space-ships.  They are going to be "sealed within our slave-pens" as the Anubian lord says on top.

This story was written by Chris Claremont in his prime.  I hear people on various message boards and podcasts slamming Claremont and Byrne; I find it sickening.  It's hard for them to imagine that Claremont was once as popular as Bendis or Johns.  He wrote this issue of Star-Lord as his terrific Iron Fist run concluded, and as he was taking the X-Men to encounter the Shi'ar Empire.  In a text piece after the story, Claremont talks about his love for science fiction novels, especially his love for Robert Heinlein. "I grew up reading his so-called juveniles," Claremont wrote.  "Hell, I read every book of his I could get my hands on as soon as I could find them."

Star-Lord's reimagining as a swashbuckling anti-authority hero puts him square in the Heinlein mold.  George R.R. Martin may have been another influence: Windholme reminds me slightly of Windhaven, an early Martin story that appeared in Analog (1975).

Starlord in his invisible Ship

As the reader sees Star-Lord for the first time through the eyes of the alien starship's bridge--he appears to be just sitting in empty space!  If you see this bridge in other panels, there is a wink and a nod to classic Star Trek.  Star-Lord isn't merely sitting on his butt...he's sitting in a wondrous spaceship that is invisible.

Starlord's sentient Ship

Peter Quill's ally throughout this issue and all the ones following it was a sentient, morphing starship--simply called Ship--that shared a unique bond with him.  Ship had a female persona and was most definitely in love with Peter.  Her conversations with Peter were quite humorous at times.  If you remember the first Star-Lord story, Peter Quill was a jerk, but Ship's interaction with Peter---plus his heroic actions--make him an extremely likeable character in this tale.

I'm not really up on the latest take on Star-Lord in the Annihilation series and everything that followed.  From Wikipedia I see that Ship was destroyed in Annihilation: Starlord Conquest.  Sounds like Keith Giffen, blowing up things he doesn't care for!  While I like what I've seen so far in the new Guardians of the Galaxy, that Peter Quill seems like a watered down version of the one I fell in love with.  Who in their right mind would get rid of Ship?

Montage of Starlord in action

When Star-Lord invades the alien slaver ship, we are treated to a terrific montage of him battling the alien slavers.  From this point on, he hooks up with Kip and Sandy, and starts to track down the real masterminds behind this operation.

Splash of Cinnabar by Byrne and Austin

The concepts, planets, and alien races in this epic story just keep on coming.  We see another terrific splash page introducing us to Cinnabar, a hellish world with anti-gravity palaces built by the merchant lords of the galaxy.  Again, just great line and detail work here by Byrne and Austin.

To show you that Byrne invested a great deal of energy in this project, he also wrote a text piece in Marvel Preview #11, where he discussed the portrayal of aliens in the Marvel Universe and the aliens he designed for this story.  Byrne writes: "...STARLORD is a fantasy.  It's Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon.  It's Star Trek.  And so we bend the truth a little, to allow for cross breeding, and romances between alien races."

Starlord swashbuckles with a sword

Eventually all trails lead to Prince Gareth and his band of aliens--the exact same aliens who came to Earth in Marvel Preview #4 and killed Peter's mother.  It's a great chance for Peter to pick up a sword and deal with them in typical swashbuckling style.  The dispatching of the villains isn't even the end of the story--there's more revelations about Peter's past, and hope for his future, that rounds out this tale.

This Star-Lord story is one of the best comics ever produced in the 1970s.  At 50 pages in length, with a self-contained narrative, it should really be called a graphic novel.  Everyone involved in the production recognized that they had captured lightning in a bottle.

Claremont and Byrne's epic story propelled Star-Lord into more stories, although this would be the only time that Byrne and Austin drew the character.  Star-Lord appeared in three more Marvel Preview magazines (14, 15, 18), the first two written by Claremont and drawn by Carmine Infantino and Bob Wiacek.  There was the full color Marvel magazine, Marvel Super Special #10 by Doug Moench, Gene Colan, and Tom Palmer.  And in 1980, regular Marvel comic appearances in Marvel Spotlight by Moench and Tom Sutton.  None of these stories ever came close to the original magic captured in Preview #11...which is why the character faded away after a while.

If you are a classic Marvel fan and can find Marvel Preview #4 or the Star-Lord Special Edition color reprint for sale, by all means pick it up.  Nuff said!

Berni Wrightson Star-Lord pinup

| | Comments (1) | TrackBacks (0)

Sometimes it’s the artwork that sells you on a character more than the story.  Doc Savage, the Shadow, Conan—my appreciation of those characters all started with the cover paintings.  With Star-Lord’s first appearance in Marvel Preview #4, it was this frontispiece by Berni Wrightson.

Berni Wrightson StarLord pinup in Marvel Preview 4 1976

I just think this is magnificent.  Peter Quill blasting out the brains of an alien against the backdrop of—another planet—another moon?  The whiteness of that object highlights Star-Lord in the foreground, a very clever page design that Wrightson probably whipped out and thought nothing more of it.  Nuff said.

Star-Lord’s Black and White Origin in Marvel Preview #4

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

In September, we celebrate Marvel’s science fiction heroes and stories that originated in the 70s and 80s.  Some of these continue on in the current Marvel cosmic line, most notably Star-Lord!

Marvel Preview 4 1976, First appearance of StarLord

Star-Lord premiered in the black and white magazine, Marvel Preview #4.  It had a gorgeous cover, painted by Gray Morrow, showing the character gliding through an alien planet.  This cover and the costume design had me sold right away.  Here was a guy who looked like an intergalactic cop patrolling the galaxy with a fancy gun strapped to his waist.  Archie Goodwin’s editorial echoed my sentiments:  I Say It’s Space Opera And To Hell With It!

In his introduction to the story, writer Steve Englehart mentions that Marv Wolfman came up with the character name Star-Lord, leaving it to Steve to conceive and flesh out the details.  Englehart described his interest in astrology—and several astrological details are sprinkled throughout Star-Lord’s origin.  Surprisingly—despite Englehart’s interest in mysticism and philosophy—the lead character Peter Quill seems like a real dick in this first appearance!

StarLord splash page by Steve Gan Marvel Preview 4

The artwork in this first story was by Steve Gan.  Was he a Filipino artist?  You can see similarities to Tony DeZuniga, but also some inspiration from Joe Kubert.

Many science fiction stories have the same structure as Western stories.  Star-Lord’s origin is one of them.  The story opens with Peter Quill’s birth—he’s born into conflict immediately, as Meredith’s (his mother) husband believes that Peter isn’t his son.  Well, he’s not, and it’s a plot detail that Chris Claremont would develop later.  He takes baby Peter outside to kill him with an axe, but dies from a heart attack.  The baby boy goggles at the nighttime stars in a precursor of things to come.  Later, Meredith is murdered by aliens from another world.  Peter Quill swears an oath of vengeance and will do anything it takes to get it.  Which bears a similarity to countless Western tales about young cowboys whose families are slaughtered by Indians and swear vengeance!

Peter Quill receives the StarLord costume in Marvel Preview 4

Peter Quill acts like a jerk for the rest of the story, cheating his way into a space program, even killing other astronauts in order to become the Star-Lord.  He’s transported away before being killed by a firing squad by “the Master of the Solar System” (who looked too much like the wizard Shazam to me) who gives him the Star-Lord costume.  Peter Quill has the ability to fly in space and shoot an elemental gun.  The Master gives Peter his big chance to murder the dirty aliens who killed his Mom, and the story ends with the hope that now—with his hatred finally extinguished—Peter will become a true hero.

StarLord promo 1974

Truth being told, the origin story was a lot less than I had hoped for, after being hyped up from the promo ads and covers.  I loved Englehart, but I couldn’t believe he wrote such a flawed character.  I was expecting something more…Heinlein-esque…which Chris Claremont and John Byrne would deliver a year or so in the future.  Tune back into Giant-Size Marvel for the rebirth of Star-Lord!  Nuff said.

Custom Search
 Subscribe in a reader

September 2009: Monthly Archives

About this Archive

This page is a archive of recent entries in the Starlord category.

Spider-Man is the previous category.

The Falcon is the next category.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Comic Blog Elite

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.