![]()
|
Cover Price: $.25 |
#43 |
Value: $7 (Near Mint-) |
|
Supporting Cast:
Villains: |
"A Past Gone Mad!" - 17 Pages
|
What's happened so far: In
Marvel Team-Up #41, the
Scarlet Witch found her mind possessed by a religious fanatic with magic powers
named Cotton Mather. If the name sounds familiar, it's because Cotton Mather
really existed. He was one of the main instigators behind the infamous Salem
Witch Trials of the 1600s, in which several innocent people in Salem,
Massachusetts, were killed after being accused of witchcraft. Mather uses Dr.
Doom's time machine to transport the captive Scarlet Witch back to colonial
Salem, but Spider-Man and the Vision, the Scarlet Witch's husband, use the same
device to go after her. Once in Salem, Cotton Mather and the townspeople capture
the three heroes and the Scarlet Witch is injured in the fight. They escape and
Spider-Man and Vision discover that Cotton Mather serves a mysterious and
apparently powerful entity known as the Dark Rider. They are ready to square off
with the Dark Rider when an unlikely ally emerges from the forest -- none other
than Doctor Doom himself!
However, it seems the Dark Rider knew Doom would come. In fact, he welcomed the
Doctor's arrival because he hopes to drain Doctor Doom's latent magical
abilities. "The Dark Rider has but one interest in you and the men of your time!
And that is the power of witchcraft that some of you possess," he said. Cotton
Mather mistakes Doctor Doom for an angel and gets a backhand for his trouble.
Mather slumps to the ground a broken man. We don't see him again this issue.
Meanwhile, the Dark Rider's cat transforms into a mystical saber tooth tiger.
"And it must think we're tabby treats!" Spider-Man quips. He and the Vision
battle the giant cat, but to little avail. The cat gets the better of the heroes
and leaps for Spider-Man -- only to be cut off and destroyed by a hex from the
Scarlet Witch. She's still weak and wounded, but like the Avenger she is, she's
here to help. "I should have known when I left you with the wife of John Proctor
that you would never allow yourself to stay...as long as you thought me in
danger," Vision says. "Again, I am made to understand my love for you!"
Declaring "Doom kneels to no one, be he mad or god!", Doctor Doom battles the
Dark Rider, who grows to giant size. "God? I am more than any god, Doom! Gods
pass away and are forgotten! But I am a rider of the winds of time! I am
eternal!" the villainous Dark Rider declares. It's clear that even Doctor Doom's
powerful armor is no match for the Dark Rider. The heroes join in, realizing
that their present may be in jeopardy if they cannot stop the Dark Rider here in
the year 1692. If that means teaming up with Doctor Doom, then so be it. But the
Dark Rider just laughs off their attacks. He takes out the Vision first, then
the Scarlet Witch, then Spider-Man and finally Doctor Doom. The story ends with
the triumphant Dark Rider standing over his four fallen foes. "And now, the game
begins anew! My game! And may the future tremble!" he declares. Sounds like a
reason to check back next issue to me!
We also get a couple of pages largely depicting the real-life Salem witch
trials. John Proctor, a man accused of witchcraft who befriended the heroes and
aided the wounded Scarlet Witch in
Marvel Team-Up #42, is brought to trial. Some girls in the village
pretend he has cast a spell on them, so he is condemned to die. "God be with
ye!" says the judge who sentences him to death. "He is ever with us, my lord,"
Proctor replies. " 'Tis thy souls...and the souls of these mad, misguided girls
I truly do fear for!" It's a nice touch to take a real-life historical figure
and make him into a sympathetic character in the story. Writer Bill Mantlo also
is making a pretty powerful statement about mass hysterical and the rush to
judgment -- something that didn't die out in the 1600s.
With the story set up in the previous two issues, this issue largely concerns
the battle between the heroes and the Dark Rider, who certainly is presented as
a powerful threat. Sal Buscema turns in some fantastic art in this issue,
particularly a two-page spread early in the story. Actually, Buscema's work
during this run on Marvel Team-Up was top-notch.
I've always liked seeing Doctor Doom team up with the good guys. He's really
more of a tragic hero than a true villain -- a largely well-intentioned,
legitimately courageous man who could have been a great hero had it not been for
one fatal flaw, in his case, his giant ego. He works well in this fight against
a far greater evil.
Next issue: The Dark Rider has beaten Spider-Man, Doctor Doom, the Vision and
Scarlet Witch. Can Moondragon be the one who can stop him?
Reviewed by Reviewed by
Bruce
Buchanan.
| Quality Rating: | 4 |
| Significance Rating: | 4 |
|
Overall Rating: |
8 |
|
Also This Month: |