Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Aw, it's the one with "Do You Want to Build a Snowman," not the one with "Danny Boy."

So, the song "Danny Boy" was in a playlist of songs for the Preacher TV show, but the YouTube video for it referenced Miller's Crossing, which I somehow don't think I had seen until recently: the below scene isn't really a spoiler, and the rest of the movie isn't as violent, but god that scene's cool. But when I think of that song, I'm thinking of the Question, but that reference was in the first two issues, not this one! From 1987, the Question #3, "Suffer the Children..." Written by Dennis O'Neil, pencils by Denys Cowan, inks by Rick Magyar.
In the previous issue, singing "Danny Boy," the faceless Question confronts Reverend Hatch, who had ordered his death in the series opener. Hatch seems broken, but the Question's concentration is broken by the sudden appearance of his ex, Myra, who had been forced into marrying the drunken Mayor Fermin. Hatch cracks the Question in the shoulder with a fireplace poker, then gets kicked into said fireplace, and goes out a fairly high window while on fire! It would be a dramatic escape for Batman, but Hatch merely seems to be put out and wrapped in a blanket by cops later; as Myra calls him a monster, and the real power in the scheme. Myra explains to Vic, not knowing who he really was, that Hatch had ordered a busload of kids blown up, to discredit the mayor's enemies. Myra shows serious grit, as she gets the Question past her drunken incompetant of a husband and the cops; while Vic was in shock from seeing her, and the revelation that she had a daughter, currently living in the same orphanage he grew up in.
Hatch had outsourced the bombing to freelance terrorist Benno Musto, who needed the cash to finance getting back at another client that had stiffed him: feels like that's good money after bad, but I suppose he had to maintain his rep. Not helping his rep or his temper, was his son Junior; whom he mocks as gay and weak. Which Benno claims would make his late wife "puke," but blowing up a school bus, that was fine? Benno tells his man Pedro, Junior would do this job, or shoot him. Meanwhile, Vic has a consult with his mentor, the coffee-swilling Tot; who notices the changes in Vic since his return.
While Vic runs down clues, luckily it was MJK Day, so not a lot of buses to choose from; Pedro and Junior were running late, since their van wouldn't start in the recent snow. Pedro suggests, maybe he wasn't cut out for the family business of terrorism, but along with the bomb already planted, Junior also brought...a very cartoony bundle of dynamite, in case there was a problem with the bomb; he could blow the kids up like Wile E. Coyote. Before they could set it off, Vic recognizes their van, mostly subconsciously, and hits them with his souped-up Volkswagen. Too close now to blow the bomb, Pedro attempts to fight it out with the Question, and gets knocked out. Junior tries his dynamite, but had about a foot of fuse on it, giving Vic time to get it away from the kids. Only later would he think, why didn't you just pull the fuse...? Idiot. Still, the issue ends with a little light in Hub City, as Vic visits Myra's daughter Jackie in the orphanage, as they build a snowman. Live in the moment, man. But, he would face Junior again...

1 comment:

Mr. Morbid said...

I really need to read O’Neil’s Question, well the whole series instead of the odd few random issues I have read. Probably mostly because it was a character on the tier level of Vic was Denny allowed so much leeway into massively overhauling not just his character & personality, but how he’d be portrayed going forward until 2005, where he’d become a shaman of cities.