Monday, April 07, 2025

A Joker what's funny? Must be so many universes away.

I was having another of those "geez, did I even read any comics last week?" moments; just long enough to not feel great about it. Then I remembered, oh yeah, didn't I read like all of the 1997 and 1998 Tangent Comics? Like 18 comics in one sitting? I think their version of the Flash was the breakout; and it's a fun book to be sure: a girl born in space with a ton of light powers, has wacky hijinks with her stage-manager of a mom and her dad working for the eeeeeeevil secret-government conspiracy trying to capture her but repeatedly failing in slapstick fashion. (The conspiracy stuff is gloomy and dead-serious across the rest of the Tangent titles, except for her dad!) I liked this one better, although it may or may not have more jokes: from 1997, Tangent Comics/the Joker #1, "Laugh 'till it Hurts!" Written by Karl Kesel, pencils by Matt Haley, inks by Tom Simmons. 

The Tangent Universe was pretty divergent from our world or the usual DCU, since Cuba and Florida were destroyed in a worst-case version of the Cuban Missile Crisis. 35 years later, New Atlantis was a thriving metropolis (not that one!) built out of Atlanta; and now home to new cop John Keel, and mysterious vigilante the Joker. Joker seems to be giving Keel the business, but lures him into giving chase, only to instead find midget mobster Doll Man and his thugs tied up and ready for jail.
Not letting it go, Keel tries to get background on the Joker, and from reporter Lori Lemaris he gets a couple of rumored origins for her, that probably aren't even close. He also tries Higher Atlantis University, where we meet meek Mary Marvel, mocked by a classmate as "girl of a thousand gimmicks." Then, wannabe cult leader Brother Power tries to preach the gospel of the Joker, who is not having it; and shuts down her prospective followers by asking them to follow her, as she leaps off a building.
Keel gets jumped by the Joker, and wakes up in a virtual reality nightmare, part-Joker, part family history: although he had been following orders, his father had been the soldier that launched the missile strike that destroyed Cuba and Florida. After the bomb goes up, Keel comes out of it, in Madame Xanadu's "VR-cade." But, when he catches up to the Joker, he thinks she might have inadvertently revealed her true origin: she was probably the child of survivors of the missile strike, who would have been severely irradiated. They're then interrupted by Doll Man's girlfriend and muscle, Big Barda!
In the end, Keel thinks he maybe understands the Joker, but also knows nothing; and the reader doesn't yet either! There's a brief peek at Joker's hideout, with masks that resemble Lori Lemaris, Mary Marvel, and Madame Xanadu; implying she was all of them. Which would make for a busy day! (No spoilers, but the sequel seemingly backpedals on that.) 

The Tangent Universe was maybe DC's only fifth-week event that they ever revisited; and they still show up here and there. I don't know if this Joker is used much, though; since her cheerful anarchy is now 100% Harley Quinn's schtick, and Kesel has his own Impossible Jones too. (It's great, grab it if you see it!)  

5 comments:

Mr. Morbid said...

The Tangent comics line was one of my favorite 5th week stuff from that era besides the JSA stuff that came out around that time period as well. Oddly enough I didn’t read that Joker one until just now. Not bad actually & yes, she DEFINITELY reads like how modern Harley is now in the comics. I’m guessing she really is a descendant from a survivor of the explosion & is probably & very likely disfigured. Doesn’t explain why she dressed up as all those people just screw with Keel, but does seem keep in line with her being disfigured. This Joker definitely feels influenced & inspired by V from V for Vendetta.

I definitely wish DC would bring the Tangent line back again, but I’m not sure how much consumer demand & support would be there if they did.

H said...

I was always more of a fan of Amalgam Comics than Tangent. Didn’t care for DC vs. Marvel but I thought there were some really good mash-ups, stuff I would have gotten regularly if they’d been more than one-shots. The ones more from the DC creators tend to be better to me, and (somewhat surprisingly) the second round of one-shots had more successes than the first one (again, in my opinion).

Mr. Morbid said...

There definitely were, yes! I liked both companies’ offerings, but I can see where some people would prefer DC’s stuff compared to Marvel’s & vice-versa. I will say I liked the first series of one-shots from ‘96 overall compared to the second ones the year after.

Which ones did you like the most?

H said...

My personal favorites were Dark Claw Adventures and Lobo the Duck (I’m a big fan of Lobo and the Batman Adventures in general anyway) but I thought the Super Soldier and Spider-Boy issues from both years were really good. There were only a few weak issues overall anyway- the vast majority was good.

Mr. Morbid said...

I definitely enjoyed the Spider-Boy stuff as well, and I definitely preferred the art on the 2nd one by Laddron.