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Eagle (Comic)The Eagle was a British weekly comic, which ran in two main volumes over the period of 1950 to 1994 (with accompanying annuals). It is strongly associated with its flagship character, Dan Dare. First Volume The Eagle was the creation of the Reverend Marcus Morris, who intended it as a Christian antidote to what he saw as the bad influence of American comics during the post-war period. He strove to produce high quality, inspirational literature unlike any existing at the time, involving the work of teams of graphic artists such as Frank Hampson and Frank Bellamy - even creating mockups of spaceships to use as reference for Dan Dare. This first volume ran from 14 April 1950 to 26 April 1969, when it merged with Lion. Strips during this volume included: As well as strips, there was heavy factual content including from cutaways of vehicles and machinery, reader contributions, and items of interest such as how to perform magic tricks. Second Volume The Eagle was re-launched by IPC (later Fleetway) on March 27 1982, aiming for the same quality end of the comic-reading market. The marketplace had matured considerably over the intervening years since the first Eagle, with readers seen as disenchanted by a largely stagnant boy's comic industry. John Purdie had recently revitalised photographic-based strips in Fleetway's girls comics, and this tactic was extended to create the relaunched Eagle's Unique selling point; most of the early strips were produced in photographic form, extending the medium to include science fiction, football, westerns, and so on. This second volume ran from March 1982 until January 1994, with several relaunches/incarnations, however the comic had become a monthly anthology by this point with little new material. Initial photo-strip incarnation As stated above, originally many strips were produced in photographic format, and printed on heavy-duty magazine paper. This had the double-edged effect of increasing a strip's visual impact, but not only was it more expensive than producing drawn strips, the medium limited the range of stories, and led to unconvincing action sequences. Dez Skinn characterised this period as "Photo strips and action stories are an ill-met pairing. No extremes, no tension. Just embarrassed amateur actors (ie office staff) wearing silly expressions and even sillier masks. " http://www.comics-international.com/QandA/qa138.html The strips were accompanied by factual articles, cartoons, and reader contributions similarly to the first volume. Strips during this period included: Revert to drawn format With issue 79 (dated September 24 1983), Eagle reverted to a more traditional drawn-strip format, which allowed the use of cheaper paper stock, and also gave the strips more creative freedom. Some existing photo-strips continued in the drawn format, and the non-strip elements were largely removed. This was Eagle's most stable and successful period; although in 1987 a mini-relaunch occurred, as the comic's size and paper stock was again changed (resembling the original incarnation) and a slew of strips were replaced. During this period, Eagle absorbed several other titles: Original strips during this period included: - The Amstor Computer - a 'story of the week' strip where readers sent in codes that loaded that week's story
- Avenger - a vigilante with a day job as a teacher
- Bloodfang - initially a naturalistic tale relating the life of a Tyrannosaur, who was later captured by time-travelling bounty hunters and shipped to a zoo in the 22nd century
- The Brothers - the tale of two twins, one regressed to a 'caveman' state due to an industrial accident, trying to locate their family
- Computer Warrior, initially known as Ultimate Warrior - a popular and long-lived strip featuring a boy who could play computer games for real using a 'real life code'
- Comrade Bronski - yet another incarnation of the 'hard man' formula, this time with the central character as a member of the KGB rooting out internal corruption
- D.A.D.D. - Dial A Dawn Detective, a group of rock stars who solved crimes during the night
- Detective Zed - a humourous strip about a robot detective in 22nd Century London
- Dolebusters - a strip about three young would-be entrepreneurs who will do anything for ready cash
- The Fists of Danny Pike - about an amateur boxer overcoming adversity to become world champion
- Ghost Squad - a spin off of Death Wish, about a squad of ghost detectives
- Ghostworld
- The Hand - about a man who gets the implanted hand of a Mafia don, which explicably forces him to commit criminal acts, petty revenge, etc. Criticised for its violence
- The Hard Men (comic strip), also known as Clovis and Chowdhary - generic 'hard men' strip about two M.I.5. agents blackmailed into performing secret missions
- Kid Cops - a science fiction strip where, as all future wars are fought on the Moon, Earth is largely deserted and children must become the police
- Legend of the Linkits - a toy merchandising tie-in, about a war of robots built from building blocks similar to Meccano or Lego
- Manta Force - a toy merchandising tie-in, about a group of space colonists who end up in a civil war on their new home. The strip was notable for the colony ship/toy appearing roughly the size of a supermarket yet supposedly containing thousands of troops, tanks and equipment stowed away for the duration of its voyage
- News Team - a group of investigative reporters undertaking adventures in war-torn countries and similarly dangerous locations
- Roadblasters - a toy merchandising tie-in, about organised racing across an entire planet
- Robo-Machines - a toy merchandising tie-in, about the battle of good and evil by sentient shapeshifting robots, similar to Transformers
- Shadow (comic strip) - a strip about a wandering police dog, similar to Lassie but with more violence
- Soup Squad - a secret division of Scotland Yard dedicated to investigating supernatural crimes
- S.O.S. - a strip from the back catalogue of Battle about a group of crack undercover soldiers, continued with new material
- Survival - a science fiction strip about a group of children struggling to survive in a world where every adult has died of plague. The strip is remarkably similar to Kids Rule O.K., which got its parent comic Action banned due to its continual and senseless violence
- Timespell
- Toys of Doom - a sequel of a frequently-reprinted multi-part horror strip originally seen in Buster in 1966, involving toys that could be controlled similarly to General Jumbo
Strips reprinted from the back catalogue of Eagle's sister title, 2000 AD included: Strips absorbed from Scream! included: Strips absorbed from Tiger included: Strips absorbed from Battle included: Strips absorbed from M.A.S.K. included: Strips absorbed from Wildcat included: Glossy relaunch Around 1991, Eagle relaunched yet again due to falling sales caused by the changing market. The relaunched comic contained fewer strips, all in colour, with large amounts of celebrity and pop music-related content. Oddly, strips seemed to either be aimed at infant school children, involving slapstick and simplistic humour, or mature adolescents similar to 2000 AD's Crisis tackling homelessness, sex, and profanity. Strips during this period included: Monthly Anthology Around 1992, Eagle moved to a monthly anthology format after being unable to shore up sales. There was very little new content, consisting mostly of reprinted Eagle strips. Publication quietly ceased in January 1994. External links Eagle
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