The New Wave (comics)

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The New Wave
Cat Yronwoode

The New Wave was a superhero team comic book published between 1986 and 1987 by Eclipse Comics.

Publication history

The New Wave was intended to be the flagship title of Eclipse's mooted shared universe, in a change to their previous works rarely crossing over outside Mark Evanier's DNAgents and its spin-offs. The Heap, a Hillman Periodicals character from the supporting cast of Airboy, was to be the initial common linking factor. The New Wave was a committee creation - the loose storyline was taken from an unfinished work written by Eclipse publisher

Cat Yronwode. They then handed the results over to Mindy Newell for further development.[1]

The team debuted in a preview included in the pages of two other Eclipse publications, The New DNAgents #9 and Miracleman #8, before The New Wave #1 debuted with a cover date of 10 June 1986. Along with Airboy, The New Wave attempted to make Eclipse's titles come closer in price to those of Marvel and DC. By reducing the page count to 16 (with 13 of story) a price of 50¢ was possible, compared to the 75¢ price of a typical major company 32-page title. The reduced page count also meant the creative team could produce the title on a bi-weekly schedule. Yronwode believed this had never been attempted by an American publisher with an ongoing title.[1] The first print run of The New Wave #1 had to be withdrawn and destroyed when Yronwode found pages 2 and 7 had been switched.[2] The initial art team included penciller Lee Weeks and inker Ty Templeton. Issue #6 featured fill-in artist Erik Larsen, some of his earliest published work.[3]

The 50¢ experiment was not a success and ended after 8 issues. Both titles went back to full-length $1.25 books; however, where Airboy remained bi-weekly, The New Wave was put to monthly status, and initially issues consists of two 13-page stories in a single comic

3-D, with a very limited number of copies of each issue produced in a non-3D format for the visually impaired.[3]

The New Wave went on hiatus before resurfacing in Eclipse's 1988-1989 crossover Total Eclipse, with the company having high hopes it would revive interest in the characters.

Plot

Professor James Holmes works for the Corporation, a large and rich company based on a space station in

Arthurian legend. Through Dot the group also meet The Volunteers, a group of superhumans.[3]

Characters

The New Wave

Others

  • Professor James Holmes: Elizabeth's father, who drinks heavily since the death of his wife and struggles with the ethics of working for the Corporation.
  • Nancy Dreiser: a colleague and some-time lover of Holmes.
  • Cliff Pasternak: the sinister CEO of the Corporation.
  • swamp monster after crashing in World War I Poland
    , and an occasionally ally of the New Wave.

Reception

Reviewing the title for The Comics Journal, Heidi MacDonald lambasted the comic, noting the first four issues featured far too much bickering, uninteresting characters and unreadable page layouts.[8] Re-reading the series some thirty years later, Lars Ingebrigtsen largely agreed.[9]

Conversely writer Jay Faerber, who first discovered The New Wave after he began frequenting a comic book store called Gema Books as a high school freshman, has cited the book as a seminal influence on him and his writing, citing its experimental biweekly, 16-page format, its emphasis on character depth over physical combat, and the originality of the character's personalities and motivations.[3]

References

  1. ^
    Fantagraphics Books
    .
  2. Fantagraphics Books
    . July 1, 1986.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Faerber, Jay (w). "Under the Influence" Dynamo 5: Sins of the Father, no. 3 (August 2010). Image Comics.
  4. Fantagraphics Books
    . September 1, 1986.
  5. Fantagraphics Books
    . February 1, 1987.
  6. Fantagraphics Books
    . May 15, 1987.
  7. Fantagraphics Books
    .
  8. Fantagraphics Books
    .
  9. ^ "1986: The New Wave". Total Eclipse.

External links