Uncanny X-Men #143
November 1981
“Demon”
Writer/Co-Plotter: Chris Claremont
Penciler/Co-Plotter: John Byrne
Inker: Terry Austin
This brilliant, stand-alone issue of the Uncanny X-Men
spotlighted Kitty Pryde, on her own in the X-Men mansion over Christmas. Now,
hands up if you’re old enough to remember that crush you had on Kitty. This
issue may remind you why you fell in love with her. For everyone else who’s
probably a newer comic book reader and wondering what’s the big deal about Kitty,
this issue will give you some insight into why she’s so cherished.
Take a moment to consider what was accomplished in these
mere twenty-two pages. Before you get to the core story, you have an effective three-page
flashback that explains the monster, a one-page prolog that demonstrates how
deadly this monster is and sets the atmosphere, one page that moves the a subplot
with Cyclops along, and two pages of character building with the rest of the
X-Men. So that leaves fifteen pages. What can you do with fifteen pages? Claremont and Byrne show
us that you can certainly do a lot.
In the aftermath of Jean Grey’s death and the Days of Future
Past storyline, there wasn’t much time to spend on the newest X-Man, Kitty
Pryde, who had joined in issue #129. Those fifteen pages showcased Kitty and gave
us some quality 1-on-1 time with her. It’s also easy to forget, especially
looking back knowing Kitty has been a successful X-Man, that fans didn’t really
know how she would fit on the team.
Despite Claremont ’s
heavy narrative (take a look at page 18 if you’re wondering what I’m talking
about), the story has a great roller-coast flow to it once the N’Garai demon attacks.
While the story paralleled the movie Alien (1979) with its similar monster and
premise, it successfully employed some of its cinematic devices, like the
heart-pounding climax and the shock ending. For those of you who might think
that the N’Garai demon was a little bit too much like Giger’s Alien, keep in
mind the N’Garai first appeared in X-Men #96 in 1975, pre-dating the movie.
Uncanny X-Men #143 is simply a great X-Men issue and a fine
example of what the Claremont/Byrne run was all about.
Hello Jason.
ReplyDeleteI came to your blog searching for panel of Marvel's golden/silver age. I've read that you really enjoy Marvel Masterworks.
Could you please advise on them for X-Men which one should be it, if you have to chose only one?
Thanks!
- Andres
Hey Andres, thanks for the comment! Hmmm, that's a tough question... if I had to pick it would be between:
ReplyDelete- X-Men Marvel Masterworks #6
http://www.collectededitions.com/marvel/mm/xmen/xmen_mm06.html
and
- Uncanny X-Men Marvel Masterworks #5
http://www.marvelmasterworks.com/uxmen_mm05.html
Hope that helps!
J.