--
DarkAngel! | "the rumours of my death are greatly
AI/CS 1 | exaggerated"
<ai...@uk.ac.ed.castle> | - Mark Twain
What's Jaspers Warp?
Waiting in suspense....
Marvin Germany
mg...@andrew.cmu.edu
m...@sei.cmu.edu
} I heard (from my borther, who's a fanatic) that Marvel intend reprinting
} the Jaspers' Warp, by Alan Moore & Alan Davis, which originally occurred
} in the Marvel UK titles Marvel Super Heroes (378-388), Defenders (1-12)
} & Mighty World of Marvel (5 or 6 to 13).
The original appearances were:
MARVEL SUPER-HEROES MONTHLY #377-389 (Sep 1981 - Sep 1982)
THE DAREDEVILS #1-11 (Jan 1983 - Nov 1983)
THE MIGHTY WORLD OF MARVEL #7-16 (Dec 1983 - Sep 1984)
MSHM #377-384,386 were written by Dave Thorpe. #385 was a fill-in by Paul
Neary. Moore started with #387. If Marvel did reprint them, the Thorpe-
written installments would be desirable, as they set up the scenario.
Moore left after MIGHTY WORLD #13. #14-16 were reprinted in the CAPTAIN
BRITAIN collection.
} Can anyone confirm/disprove this? I originally heard it was all tied
} up by Alan Moore's copyright over the Fury. If it is reprinted, I will
} kill for a copy!
I can't confirm or disprove it, though I would be very surprised if Moore
relented. Maybe he's getting soft in his old age. It wasn't Moore's
copyright over the Fury that held it up, it was his copyright on the
stories themselves. Due to the peculiarities of British copyright law,
while Marvel owns the characters, Moore owns the stories (the plot and
dialogue), and Davis the artwork). None of the three can reprint any of
the stories without the other two's permission.
In article <64...@ac.sei.cmu.edu>, m...@sei.cmu.edu (Marvin Germany) writes...
} What's Jaspers Warp?
It's along story (literally). I suppose it's time for another offer. I've
written up fairly detailed synopses of each installment of the Captain
Britain feature from the above-mentioned British comics (plus an overview
of his previous appearances, as well as a full bibliography of his
appearances prior to EXCALIBUR). Anyone who sends me a request via mail
will receive the whole kit'n'kaboodle. (Marv, you won't have to send a
request -- I'll send the files on to you anyways).
--
"He sits there in his house watching the same stupid movie over
and over again."
"Bad taste is films is not a criminal offense."
"Wait till you've seen it."
--- jayembee (Jerry Boyajian, DEC, "The Mill", Maynard, MA)
UUCP: ...!decwrl!ruby.enet.dec.com!boyajian
ARPA: boyajian%ruby...@DECWRL.DEC.COM
He starts off in "Otherworld", with Merlin the magician (yeh, I
know - corny), who tells him something about "great peril", and sends
him off to Earth. It transpires, though, that this is not the Earth
that Captain Briatin comes from - it even has it's own incarnation of
Captain Britain: Linda McQuillan, Captain UK. Anyway. There's a
politician, Sir James Jaspers, who's very anti-superheroes. He turns
out to be insane, as well as being a mutant himself with the unlimited
ability to alter reality! He makes the world go mad... Captain Britain
fights against this, but Alan Moore takes over scripting and invents the
Fury - a creation of James Jaspers which is 'programmed' to KILL ALL
SUPERHEROES! It, of course, is virtually indestructible. The very next
issue the Fury has cleared out the world of all SuperHeroes, including
Captain Britain. That was MSH #378-388.
Then Alan Moore wrote a followup story, which starts with
Captain Britain being resurrected by Merlin. Needless to say, on the
Mainstream Marvel Reality, there's another Sir James Jaspers, who also
goes insane and has super powers. He doesn't make a Fury - the one from
the original dimension follows Captain Britain over.
That's Daredevils 1-12.
The story then moves to Mighty World of Marvel #5-13.
I hope that's helped!
Joe!
What? In the Jaspers Warp storyline he is definitely dead!