The Deconstruction Of Captain Britain By Alan Moore & Alan Davis

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  • Опубликовано: 15 авг 2020
  • A look at the slightly obscure, but highly regarded Captain Britain story - sometimes referred to as Crooked World, and sometimes as Jasper’s Warp - that was serialized by Marvel UK between 1982 and 1984. Written by Alan Moore and illustrated by Alan Davis.
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    SOURCES:
    “The Saga Of Captain Britain,” by Nigel Lowrey. Back Issue 29. August 2008.
    Modern Masters - Volume 01: Alan Davis, edited by Eric Nolen-Weathington. TwoMorrows Publishing. 2006.
    The Extraordinary Works Of Alan Moore, written and edited by George Khoury. TwoMorrows Publishing. 2003.
    Kimota! The Miracleman Companion, by George Khoury. TwoMorrows Publishing. 2001.
    #alanmoore #alandavis #modernage #captainbritain #marvelcomics #saturnyne #bronzeage #comicbooks #comics #marvel #marvel616
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Комментарии • 237

  • @Redem10
    @Redem10 3 года назад +134

    "The Captain Britain story are getting too heavy....we need a new writer....huh how bout that guy Alan Moore?"

    • @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770
      @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770 3 года назад +28

      He’s a really light hearted, straightforward writer who NEVER puts in a bunch of politics into his work!

    • @captainbritain8682
      @captainbritain8682 3 года назад +5

      Probably be good

    • @lakshaykochhar6799
      @lakshaykochhar6799 3 года назад +3

      Were they smoking something?

    • @franciscoryker4669
      @franciscoryker4669 2 года назад

      You all prolly dont care at all but does anyone know a tool to log back into an Instagram account??
      I somehow lost my login password. I love any help you can give me

    • @justusandre4158
      @justusandre4158 2 года назад

      @Francisco Ryker Instablaster =)

  • @jacobsen1703
    @jacobsen1703 3 года назад +95

    Strange to think of Alan Moore and David Lloyd as ever being cheap new talent. Lol.
    I hope one day Moore allows this and his other harder-to-find titles be reprinted. There are so many stories I'd like to read. Comics go oop all too soon, many older and "alternative" titles aren't even available as pirated digital copies. It can be a damnably expensive, frustrating hobby.

    • @loubaker6861
      @loubaker6861 2 года назад +1

      keep looking on ebay. i found the tpb for about 15.00. it was a little beat up but still very readable.

    • @orngrnify
      @orngrnify 2 года назад

      L

  • @wyrdhunter
    @wyrdhunter 3 года назад +45

    I've been a life long fan of Alan Davis and have always loved the character of Captain Britain primarily because of the work he and Alan Moore did on the title. I have every collected copy of the run released. What I loved most about the character was that it was a very British take on a British character for once. It wasn't another American view of how a British character would act. The Tea and Sympathy issue to me was a standout example in many ways.

    • @youraveragecrownofthorns8919
      @youraveragecrownofthorns8919 3 года назад +2

      You should hunt down the Nightcrawler one-shot Davis did that came out just a few months ago...his artwork was great.

    • @youraveragecrownofthorns8919
      @youraveragecrownofthorns8919 3 года назад +2

      I don't mean to preach to the choir...but just to mention-
      Alan Davis work on Batman and the Outsiders is often overlooked or forgotten. It is really great material if you can find it🍟

    • @conroyjett
      @conroyjett 3 года назад +1

      @@youraveragecrownofthorns8919 I just finished reading his first JLA: The Nail Elsewhere mini-series and that blew me away.

    • @youraveragecrownofthorns8919
      @youraveragecrownofthorns8919 3 года назад

      @@conroyjett good deal! I had actually forgot that was an Elsewhere title...or is it Elseworld?

    • @arnold-hu4vk
      @arnold-hu4vk 3 года назад +1

      @@youraveragecrownofthorns8919 I am so glad I read your comment, I missed this at the time! Davis' Nightcrawler is probably my favourite, I'm a big fan of his Excalibur runs and Clandestine.

  • @AKImeru
    @AKImeru 3 года назад +28

    Here in Brazil we lucked out and got a long distribution of the 2002 version that is as affordable as it is complete. It is how I got to read this story.
    One of my personal 'mainstream' (if you can call that) super hero tales.

    • @AKImeru
      @AKImeru 3 года назад +1

      @Eamonn Wright Oh I am a huge Judge Dredd fan! "America" is my current favorite story from the character, wish to read more.

  • @davecorry7723
    @davecorry7723 7 месяцев назад +3

    The Jaspers Reality Warp was the greatest story I had ever read.
    Read it all back in the early 80s as a 13/14 year old.
    Utter, utter magic.
    Thank you for making this video.

    • @carolemongin2251
      @carolemongin2251 6 месяцев назад

      Should be mage into a dark marvel film.

  • @odiep2181
    @odiep2181 3 года назад +28

    I remember stealing my Dad’s trade of this when I was in middle school. The Alans made such a good story that it went and turned me into a comics nerd. CURSE YOU ALAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!

  • @beefgravystudios
    @beefgravystudios 3 года назад +5

    Great video. Never knew Moore had such a great run with such an obscure character. Really is a testament to how good he was.

  • @jimkrueger1028
    @jimkrueger1028 3 года назад +49

    Great Presentation. I was surprised that there was no mention of the Captain Britain Omnibus that reprinted all the Alan Davis and Alan Moore material. I was going to sell mine until I watched your video. It’s doubtful in light of what you shared that it will ever be reprinted again. Now I have to hold on to this book. One of my favorite Marvel stories ever. Thank you for the heads up.

    • @jikorijo4516
      @jikorijo4516 3 года назад +4

      Well, that stinks it won't ever be reprinted. I have an older trade that contains all of Alan Davis' run after Moore left. I was hoping someday I could get a Omnibus containing the two Alan's runs. I guess I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for the older Omnibus edition.

    • @jikorijo4516
      @jikorijo4516 2 года назад +3

      Just found out Marvel is reprinting the Moore/Davis run again: www.instocktrades.com/comingsoon/may210694/captain-britain-omnibus-hc-davis-cvr

  • @charlesgray6385
    @charlesgray6385 3 года назад +34

    2000AD had some solid stories but D R & Quinch stuck out among the top. Glad you're covering Captain Britain. Deserves more love then it gets.

    • @kez0o9
      @kez0o9 3 года назад

      D r and quinch were brilliant, I read the originals in 2AD . There so many comics being published and then cancelled it was hard to keep track, definitely the UK golden age, got all the original Captain Britain, but missed out on this apart from a few odd issues, would be nice to see a complete collection.

  • @manic2360
    @manic2360 3 года назад +5

    Damn..that was a flashback!..2000AD , Marvel UK, Capt Britain ...my kidhood comics....great vid, i can feel a browse on ebay coming on..

  • @Cervando
    @Cervando 3 года назад +10

    I had the original Marvel UK run but sadly the paper stock was extremely poor and my copies were stored in boxes in my garage and consequently rotted. I absolutely loved Captain Britain. The characters were brilliant and different and the Fury really felt like an unstoppable foe. He wasn't scared to kill off characters, even popular ones and Betsy been blinded by Slaymaster was truly shocking.

  • @Nono-hk3is
    @Nono-hk3is 3 года назад +7

    Great video. I love your coverage of significant but under-publicized developments.

  • @thefurrybastard1964
    @thefurrybastard1964 3 года назад +33

    My god, I remember being excited when I got my hands on the first issue of Captain Britain way back in 1976. Back when comics only cost 10p, roughly 15-20 Cents for you Americans. A time when kids could easily afford their comics.

    • @brianbraddock32
      @brianbraddock32 3 года назад +5

      Did you get a free mask or boomerang with the comic?

    • @thefurrybastard1964
      @thefurrybastard1964 3 года назад +1

      @@brianbraddock32 I think it was a boomerang. You got a free mask with the first Spider-Man UK comic, as I recall, it was a paper bag with the pattern and eyeholes cut into it.

    • @kez0o9
      @kez0o9 3 года назад +1

      the very first UK marvel had an incredible hulk, iron-on transfer I seem to remember.

    • @thefurrybastard1964
      @thefurrybastard1964 3 года назад +1

      @@kez0o9 Yes, the Hulk seen from the back.

    • @thyvideomaker3063
      @thyvideomaker3063 2 года назад +1

      That is so awesome

  • @andypitchless5515
    @andypitchless5515 3 года назад +1

    Excellent journalism.

  • @urosvelickovic6311
    @urosvelickovic6311 3 года назад +6

    Amazing video! You sir are a gift.

  • @Koopaklown
    @Koopaklown 3 года назад +10

    Once again you touch upon that corner of awesome overlooked works! While I do like the darker Moore stuff like Watchmen, I love the lighter works like Supreme, Captain Britain, and Tom Strong. Fingers crossed for that third one to get a video ;)

  • @theunknowngamer5477
    @theunknowngamer5477 3 года назад +3

    This was fantastic! Years of reading, listening to the nerd cult, hunting for obscure comics...
    I never knew Earth 616 was anything other than a Marvel imagining.
    Almost a generic, side note retelling...every word was a balance.

  • @psykomancer4420
    @psykomancer4420 3 года назад +20

    Only ever knew Captain Britain existed cause of Xmen

    • @Katzztar
      @Katzztar 3 года назад +4

      Same, it was Excalibur that I first heard of him and Meggan.

    • @brianbraddock32
      @brianbraddock32 3 года назад +1

      @@Katzztar
      Which is a shame because he was depicted extremely poorly in Excalibur I think, so the few people who have heard of him disliked him.

  • @Anders010
    @Anders010 3 года назад +14

    Awesome video as usual sir. Marvel UK is something I'm not familiar with, so it was very informative.

  • @koufax3739
    @koufax3739 3 года назад +3

    Great video

  • @deeconstruction8163
    @deeconstruction8163 3 года назад +9

    Thank you tor this video. I was a huge fan of the eighties Excalibur title but it was the very devil trying to find out more about Captain Britain's past and what I could find just made it even more confusing. This clears a lot of stuff up. I hope someday I'll be able to read the earlier issues.

  • @JohnnerRobbins
    @JohnnerRobbins 3 года назад +6

    In 2012 Hachette published the Moore run in 'Captain Britain: A Crooked Earth' as a hardback volume in their series 'Marvel Ultimate Graphic Novels Collection'. Probably the easiest- and most inexpensive- way to get hold of the run. I think I paid 10 euros for it a few years back (though I still have all but maybe one of the the UK issues that originally featured Moore's run).

  • @robertpassaro4089
    @robertpassaro4089 10 месяцев назад

    This is why I love RUclips - for great and unique content like this. Thank you.

  • @Jerel_con_jota
    @Jerel_con_jota 3 года назад +3

    Yesss! Thank you! Alan Davis and CB are criminally slept on. I was only able to find the reprinted compilation in Barcelona.

  • @mathewguglielmi8451
    @mathewguglielmi8451 3 года назад +4

    Another great analysis of storytelling. It's made me want to read the series. I like how you made analogies and links with Alan Moore's runs on Swamp Thing, Miracle Man, Supreme and his own series V for Vendetta.

  • @garykuzminski7969
    @garykuzminski7969 3 года назад +2

    Excellent. Thank you, sir.

  • @mr.sand7899
    @mr.sand7899 3 года назад +43

    I wish Marvel would reprint this book.

    • @peterfmodel
      @peterfmodel 3 года назад +1

      I picked up a copy in japan many years ago, so there is a reprint. Its possible Kinokuniya may have it available, assuming you are talking about the first Alan Moore story, which is brilliant. I found a hardcopy version on amazon.co.uk for £52.11, which is a lot mroe than i paid when i purchased it about 18 years ago.

    • @wssayer
      @wssayer 3 года назад +3

      I wish the would reprint the omnibus. It currently goes for £500+ on the second hand market!

    • @shaderax_storm6165
      @shaderax_storm6165 3 года назад +2

      You can get the marvel graphics novel collection volume 3. Crooked world from the UK for around £3-10. Companies like Zavi sell them as comic book mystery bundles.
      Captain Britain has some of the best single panels In comics from the 80s-90s. Not sure about current day marvel or DC, sadly i stopped reading them

    • @captainbritain8682
      @captainbritain8682 3 года назад +1

      Yeah

    • @tomasgordilloreale5841
      @tomasgordilloreale5841 3 года назад

      Theres is an spanish print by Panini . Look Up " Marvel héroes Panini : capitán Britania"

  • @muttjones222
    @muttjones222 3 года назад +5

    Fantastic video! This was a side of Alan Moore that I had always heard about but never knew the exact details of. Captain Britain was always one of those characters with an elaborate but seemingly impenetrable backstory that made it a little difficult to understand especially when the character would be used in modern appearances. This is a great overview!

  • @Rechargerator
    @Rechargerator 2 года назад +2

    I read the collected Captain Britain after the other stories appeared in North America, so I never understood how contemporary the three stories were. Good context.
    And he certainly gave Alan Davis something to develop into. As much as I enjoyed his work on "Batman and the Outsiders" (with the cool Kevin Nolan annual) it isn't remembered so well. And a jolly good X-Men series to collect the big X-$ that he would not have "cut his teeth" nearly so well if beginning on those stories. But his The Nail" story at DC should be available also!

  • @rickytoddbotelho9555
    @rickytoddbotelho9555 3 года назад +2

    Another excellent doc. Excellent.

  • @RightTurnClyde
    @RightTurnClyde 3 месяца назад

    This was a great period for British comics, and it happened just as I entered my teens and started to mature. I feel extraordinarily lucky to have read all of it at that time. It blew my tiny little mind

  • @mlunaID
    @mlunaID 3 года назад +1

    Wow what thoughtful work done in this channel. Subscribed!

    • @StrangeBrainParts
      @StrangeBrainParts  3 года назад

      Thank you! I hope to continually renew that opinion with future videos.

  • @50caliber29
    @50caliber29 3 года назад +3

    I bought the monthly black & white artwork comic in the early eighties. I was absolutely obsessed with it. I have the 2002 book & I will never sell it. The Fury is just the best antagonist ever written, pure single minded, relentless killing machine.
    Alan Davies artistic development on this title is a joy to observe & his work in the later episodes is just artistically awe inspiring. The fight between the Fury, the CB's & the Special Executive is perfect the description of the Fury's calm analysis of the fight, while it's fighting, even as it's being destroyed is chilling. Davies work on this series & John Byrnes work on the X-men (Days of future past, Dark Phoenix, Proteus etc) were some of the best artwork of the time. Moore is a genius writer who perfectly captures British eccentricity & his & Davies run on CB will never be matched. A rare masterpiece and one I feel lucky & honoured to own.

    • @DanAvenell
      @DanAvenell 3 года назад +1

      'The Fury is just the best antagonist ever written, pure single minded, relentless killing machine.' Yup.

  • @182jim182
    @182jim182 3 года назад +2

    AMAZING VIDEO!!!! So informative. Love your videos, keep up the excellent work!

  • @hsatin20
    @hsatin20 3 года назад +1

    What a legendary combo

  • @KesselRunner606
    @KesselRunner606 3 года назад +1

    With 2000 ad, Warrior, Star Lord, the early and mid 80s was a true golden age of British comic books.

  • @NimbusCumulus
    @NimbusCumulus 3 года назад +5

    16:03 Here in the UK (and I think in Europe) it has been reprinted by Panini as Captain Britain Vol 5 End Game and is still in print.
    It also seems to be available on Amazon.com for a fairly reasonable price.

  • @winnerwatson1883
    @winnerwatson1883 3 года назад +3

    Here we go!

  • @RighteousBrother
    @RighteousBrother 3 года назад +1

    I've read virtually all of Alan Moore's work and every book written about him, and God knows how many interviews ans articles.....but I never knew that Earth 616 thing. Great work!

  • @fad23
    @fad23 3 года назад +5

    I have the 2002 collection on my shelf with many other Moore books!

  • @ericnoble5194
    @ericnoble5194 3 года назад +2

    Excellent video. I hope to track those reprint issues down. Thank you for talking more about British comics.

  • @youraveragecrownofthorns8919
    @youraveragecrownofthorns8919 3 года назад +8

    You really should consider doing an examination of Moore's Time Twisters and Future Shocks short pieces from his earlier days

  • @ryanbenson4610
    @ryanbenson4610 3 года назад +1

    I LOVED Excalibur and I wondered in what comic a lot of Captain Britain’s earlier adventures took place. I just found out thanks to this great video! Subscribed!

  • @WallKenshiro
    @WallKenshiro 3 года назад +15

    So MarvelMan as MiracleMan could be the same guy killed in Captain Britian. Meaning that each one exists on separate Earths with nothing separating them but their names, maybe up until the point MiracleMan was killed in Captain Britain's comic. It's like Alan Moore accidentally planned ahead.

    • @winnerwatson1883
      @winnerwatson1883 3 года назад +6

      Technically, this Miracleman exists on Earth-238 whereas the Marvelman (Warrior/Eclipse) exists on Earth-18 as according to the Marvel Multiverse in Marvel Comics #1000.
      EDIT: I mistaken the put the wrong numbering and designations, but it’s been fixed.

  • @ottosixtysix8546
    @ottosixtysix8546 3 года назад

    Your postings are always a welcome sight, particularly when there about creators I'm familiar with working on characters and storylines that were previously only spoken about it passing. Thank you for another wonderful posting.

  • @eammonful
    @eammonful 3 года назад +5

    616 is the number that you get when you add up the numbers associated with the letters of Nero's latin name (using isopsepgy or gematria) and appears in a few latin manuscripts. The original greek text and most latin manuscripts have 666 which is the number of Neron (Nero's Greek name)

  • @trygon_stingray
    @trygon_stingray 3 года назад

    I’ve always really enjoyed this storyline, and this is the best discussion of it I’ve seen (certainly in light of Alan Moore’s other work). Great job!

  • @grayscribe1342
    @grayscribe1342 3 года назад +6

    I‘d like to add, that the villains were truly terrifying. Especially after the Fury had killed Captain Britain once already you had to wonder how he could win. And with Jaspers being able to warp reality?
    The final battle was well set up and executed without any deus ex machina, as all elements were introduced ahead of it.
    And it was still awesome to behold.

  • @michaelemond7315
    @michaelemond7315 3 года назад

    A wonderful summary. Thank you for the work you put into this.

  • @leavonfletcher4197
    @leavonfletcher4197 3 года назад +3

    Always good to see Supreme!

  • @deusnightfire
    @deusnightfire 3 года назад +2

    I'm loving your content. Like I'm super happy that I found your account in the random blue. Keep up the hardwork

  • @Zartak343
    @Zartak343 3 года назад +1

    As always, incredible video my man.

  • @Bats238
    @Bats238 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic video about one of my all time favourite comics stories. I had all the original comics but lost half of them when I loaned them to a friend who's Mother through them out by mistake (I was not happy). I finally got the omnibus reprint years later and so could enjoy it again. I think this run is one of the greatest things ever created and I wish more people could read it. I consider this Moore's second greatest work behind Marvelman which is my favourite.

  • @Nebol
    @Nebol 3 года назад +12

    Hey, what about Excalibur? I loved that series. With Kitty Pride, Phoenix and that blond hottie... and the little robot dragon something... I thought it was amazing. Especially the episode with that insane guy who could mess people up by pulling their "strings" that only he could see....

    • @geraldstephens6612
      @geraldstephens6612 3 года назад +4

      That part of Excalibur was written & drawn by Alan Davis, which included some parts of the Captain Britian series. Great work. Would like to see Mr Davis write & draw Aquaman someday.

    • @deveryshepardson3640
      @deveryshepardson3640 3 года назад +3

      Megan was that blond hottie the little dragon was Lockheed, the little robot widget allowed them to be in “The cross time caper.” Excalibur was a huge favorite off mine, loved their “Inferno” storyline as well. Chris Clairemont deserves a ton of credit on this story and it went way downhill when he left.

    • @bigvis497
      @bigvis497 3 года назад +2

      I like the solo Davis Excalibur. When Claremont was writing the series had some high points, but it was a little too "silly" for my tastes, and some of the plots just dragged on and on. The solo Davis run was much more focused.

  • @BainesMkII
    @BainesMkII 3 года назад +1

    @7:30 ReligionForBreakfast has a video covering the 616/666/Nero theory, which also addresses historical context. Nero's name in Greek converts to 666, while the Latin spelling converts to 616. (He also says that while we have a few manuscripts that use 616, the earliest known manuscript used 666.)

  • @JohnAShort
    @JohnAShort Год назад

    A very good overview of Alan Moore's time on Captain Britain. Marvel UK has reprinted it in book form... I have a small claim to 'fame' in that I provided my copy of one of the original comics that featured a page missed out of the American reprints. They scanned the page from my version and restored it to the story. As far as I know that page (missed out to make the strips fit in an issue of X-Men Archives) has never been reprinted in the States.

  • @paulpetroleum
    @paulpetroleum 3 года назад +1

    I remember vividly reading the original run as a kid.
    Was so dark in comparison to most of the stuff I'd read in Marvel comics back then.
    Think I may still have my Captain Britain badge somewhere from one of the issues..

  • @tonebone7449
    @tonebone7449 3 года назад +1

    According to interviews, in Moore's mind, Merlin was the final incarnation of The Doctor from Doctor Who.

  • @nicoelmito
    @nicoelmito 3 года назад

    Great video!

  • @vicaldama9314
    @vicaldama9314 3 года назад +1

    I saw a few heads mention it here but yeah man Excalibur !!..with the Lockheed dragon ..one of the last series before I got into adult content..

    • @deveryshepardson3640
      @deveryshepardson3640 3 года назад +1

      @vic aldama I am one of those heads, and yes Wxcalibur was an excellent title.

  • @bserum
    @bserum 3 года назад

    You are the one of the most knowledgable comic RUclipsrs our there! Love your channel in general and this episode in particular.
    The last time I dug into the matter, I discovered it was Dave Thorpe who coined "616" and that the "mark of the beast" was most likely apocryphal rumors that fed into Alan Moore's wizardly reputation. Maybe I'm misinformed, but I thought you'd prefer to know than not. Cheers!

  • @tompuce84
    @tompuce84 3 года назад

    Hey I'm glad I have a copy of this 2002 reprint. Bought it on Alan Moore's name alone. It's such a great comic book, I read it every once in a while. Great villains, great ending, great art all around. Nice vid as usual man, thx!

  • @RothurThePaladin
    @RothurThePaladin 3 года назад +2

    This is gonna be a good one.

  • @blackphoenix77
    @blackphoenix77 3 года назад +4

    I wish Doctor Who Monthly (originally known as Doctor Who Weekly) was still being published by Marvel; it would be interesting to see the Doctor interacting with other Marvel characters like the X-Men.

    • @Clay3613
      @Clay3613 3 года назад +3

      Marvel could certainly write the TV show better than the current BBC writers!

    • @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770
      @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770 3 года назад

      Yes. The Doctor. Well known Marvel character. Made by Marvel. Created in 1963 by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee.
      The Doctor is my favorite Marvel character.
      Shame they’re not in the MCU.

  • @youraveragecrownofthorns8919
    @youraveragecrownofthorns8919 3 года назад +2

    Great work, as always! Were those Dr. Who stories reprinted in the later Marvel run? I've never been able to determine.
    I fortunately own both the Panini edition and the collected volume you show in the vid, had them for years- but i would hate to try and find a copy now🙄

  • @Kaulso93
    @Kaulso93 3 года назад +12

    This era of the Captain Britain donde by Moore and Davis is one of my favorite comics of all time. You have donde justice in this "desconstruction". Thanks.
    Althought a few notes:
    - The number 616 was not a Moore idea, apparently it's from Dave Thorpe, the previous writter of the series. The origin of the number it's the same thought according from this article: bleedingcool.com/comics/dave-thorpe-marvel-616-explains-where-it-came-from/
    - The only complete reprint of this series was a Marvel Omnibus from 2009 that collects the Thorpe, Moore and Delano issues, but it's long out of print. In Spain the comic was reprinted in 2018 also with the Thorpe and Delano issues, maybe the only edition avilable in the world right now.

    • @broomhands8001
      @broomhands8001 3 года назад +1

      Donde?

    • @Kaulso93
      @Kaulso93 3 года назад +1

      @@broomhands8001 By Panini Comics, this it's the book. ;)
      comics.panini.es/store/pub_esp_es/sclmh092-es-marvel-heroes-comic-marvel-heroes-comic-n-92.html

    • @Gigas0101
      @Gigas0101 Год назад +1

      @@broomhands8001 aqui

  • @con_doorman
    @con_doorman 3 года назад +1

    Daredevils #1 (the resurrection of Captain Britain) blew my 10-year old brain. I immediately made a Captain Britain mask out of a cereal box. I still regard Moore's saga as the greatest superhero epic ever.

  • @Mario_Angel_Medina
    @Mario_Angel_Medina 3 года назад +3

    I always felt it was kind of odd that the main Marvel universe has such a "satanic" name as Earth-616, but now that I know Alan Moore was the one who came up with the name, it makes a lot more sense

  • @shaunjamesbryan2032
    @shaunjamesbryan2032 Год назад

    glad you did the vid, but there were more brilliant CB stories post Moore, first Jamie Delano, no slouch, and then Alan Davies himself. No multiverses were threatened but the characters developed considerably. those comics set-up the UK contingent of the 'X' team Excalibur.

  • @nodatastored684
    @nodatastored684 Год назад

    What Alan Moore did was tie it to core British Fiction and added the Dr Who that Claremont started in his Early run with the Master being a villain Brian faced. There seems to be a shared multiverse with British science fiction stories overlapping

  • @dfcsons
    @dfcsons 3 года назад +2

    I don't care what they say, that first costume is bad-ass. I personally never liked the revamped costume. I have some of those original UK issues of the character that my cousin brought over on a summer vacation in the 70s.
    Excellent job as always. I really appreciate your dedication to more obscure work.

    • @RogerioPereiradaSilva77
      @RogerioPereiradaSilva77 3 года назад +1

      Funny, it is the opposite for me. While I have absolutely no problem whatsoever with the original costume, which kinda has a classic "Dave Cochrum" vibe to it, I absolutely LOVE the redesign. It remains one of my all time favorite super hero costumes!

    • @dfcsons
      @dfcsons 3 года назад

      @@RogerioPereiradaSilva77 To each their own sir!

  • @jasonguinn6075
    @jasonguinn6075 Год назад

    This seems to be the 1st instance of numerical designations being assigned to different Earths. I'm a fan of Captain Britain and I hope he can be utilized in a comic or animated series properly

  • @Quiro26
    @Quiro26 3 года назад +3

    What a great video. I am fan of Captain Britain via Excalibur. So much history.

  • @daniarmstrong3023
    @daniarmstrong3023 Год назад

    Like everything Alan Moore writes, when I came across reprints of the run I👏🏼was👏🏼besotted👏🏼and moments have stuck with me - 2 decades after reading the run. Alan is the greatest Comics writer e.v.e.r 💯❤️

  • @MaximumRD
    @MaximumRD 3 года назад +1

    I always kind of liked the format of UK comics. As a kid I had a friend return from London with a few comic books, I was quite sheltered and oblivious to anything outside Canada back then so I was fascinated by what I saw since I had no idea their comics looked or were laid out any differently. I mean yeah I expected stories to cater to regional sensibilities and differences and the price to reflect UK currency but I guess otherwise I expected them to be identical.

  • @paulbrown6464
    @paulbrown6464 8 месяцев назад

    Other heroes referenced in the graveyard are Roy Risk = Dan Dare, Iron Tallon = The Steel Claw and Gaath = Garth

  • @frankvizen5480
    @frankvizen5480 2 года назад

    Deaths Head is my favorite MarvelUK creation. Wish they'd use him and Captain Britain more

  • @antoniomoniz9374
    @antoniomoniz9374 3 года назад

    Captain Britain is a cool character and when alan davis is drawing it its amazing. Alan moore as a writer has a unique style.

  • @samuelbarden4790
    @samuelbarden4790 Год назад

    Alan Moore didn't try to mend the relationship with Alan Davis. He just blamed Eclipse for not getting Davis' permission. Davis brought up that Moore could have called Davis to find out if Moore was concerned. This is why we don't hear any complains from Alan Moore about Miracleman or Captain Britain, he was party to publishing Miracleman with checking with his collaborators. Plus Davis was the one who corrected Moore's statement about the editor who left Warrior.

  • @GeneralBulldog54
    @GeneralBulldog54 3 года назад

    TIL Alan Moore worked on Captain Britain and may have been responsible for the 616 universe naming convention. Amazing video!

  • @alexiuspereira8672
    @alexiuspereira8672 3 года назад

    thank you

  • @johnbuchheister9142
    @johnbuchheister9142 3 года назад

    I now have to find the Supreme titles by Moore. Thanks.

  • @davidcripps3011
    @davidcripps3011 3 года назад

    Still one of my favourite comic book stories. I was lucky enough to be collecting them as it came out. The Fury is also my favourite comic book monster.

  • @norespectpictures1633
    @norespectpictures1633 3 года назад

    I started CB when the trade paperback of the davies/delano stories were reprinted in the late 80s. Great stuff.

  • @christopherulichney
    @christopherulichney Год назад

    I wonder if Moore purposefully suggested the name "MiracleMan" to Eclipse just to stick it to Marvel Comics, knowing that they probably didn't know the name's origins in their own publication. Seems like something he would have done.

  • @jvad007
    @jvad007 3 года назад

    I remember being surprised that Moore did an introduction to that original Captain Britain trade that came out in the early 00's. I have the omnibus they published 10(?) years ago that has all this and the Delano/Davis follow-up run. All very very good stuff.

  • @jamesbellegarde2893
    @jamesbellegarde2893 3 года назад

    I am amazed when I see early captain Britain in vivid colour I originally read the original British versions and they were black and white at least the ones we got in Canada would like. Most in-depth well done captain Britain video I’ve ever seen them!

  • @patricklewis7636
    @patricklewis7636 3 года назад

    The episode of this where the time jumping character has his future self killed and then waits for death is priceless on its own. This and the warpies saga that introduces Megan are about as good as comics get. Oh, and might I suggest taking a look at the recent The Vision run that introduced viv vision? Nice work.

  • @therussiancomicbookgeek
    @therussiancomicbookgeek 3 года назад +2

    I got this book but never full finished it
    I guess it’s time to change that

  • @matthewtyler-jones8317
    @matthewtyler-jones8317 3 года назад

    Loved this nostalgia rush. Moore’s Captain Britain run was one of my favourites, because, as you say, both he and Davies stuck around for the complete story. I have three pages of Davies original artwork in my collection. A sequence that includes the 8mage you showed of Mad Jim Jaspers holding Captain Britain between his finger nails. It’s a pity it’s not more easily reprinted, but now I know it’s because Davies and Moore retain the rights, I am happier to say "ha I also have the original run in black and white. " *smug grin*

    • @StrangeBrainParts
      @StrangeBrainParts  3 года назад

      I think you've earned that smug grin. Finding the originals on this side of the Atlantic is quite a challenge!

  • @paulocosta4744
    @paulocosta4744 3 года назад

    The Arachnid is the Spider, but Garth is Garth. I used to read Garth when I was a kid, in the newspaper my Dad bought.

  • @gevdarg
    @gevdarg 3 года назад

    Great video. This explains a lot about the Captain Britain we find in Excalibur. I found the character very unlikeable. But now, I see why. He's gone through the wringer. It reminds me of what Starlin did to the Adam Warlock character.

  • @mattdavies8153
    @mattdavies8153 3 года назад +1

    I'd love to see how Captain Britain copes with the break up of the UK. definite room for a graphic novel there.

  • @alankohn6709
    @alankohn6709 3 года назад

    I am a massive Swamp Thing fan and came onboard just as Alan Moore took over. So I eagerly read V for vendetta, Watchmen, League of extraordinary Gentlemen and one thing started to become clear Moore is an extordnary writer but he needs someone to keep him on point or he will wander off on a tangent and I'd find myself going wow that's really well written but is it important to the story...Not really so I am interested in chasing up Captain Britain to see what something earlier is like.

  • @tonebone7449
    @tonebone7449 3 года назад

    The issues of Captain Britain following Moore were written by Jamie Delano, and drawn by Davis... they are also quite good and were collected in a TPB published in the UK.

  • @superman1081
    @superman1081 3 года назад +1

    Wasn't there a British version of Captain America, called "Union Jack"?

  • @4891MR
    @4891MR Год назад

    It was certainly influential on Chris Claremont. I'm a great fan of Alan Moore. Captain Britain is hard to find, but I bought mine from Walt Flanagan.

  • @lagbait3076
    @lagbait3076 3 года назад

    Interesting, I didn't know much of Brian before the Excalibur run in the 80's. It explains the more dimensional hopping aspect of the comics to which I just thought were fun as a kid.

  • @peterfmodel
    @peterfmodel 3 года назад

    Alan Moore did a brilliant job, his first epic was great and worth reading by anyone. Its very stand alone as well, so no prior knowledge is required.

  • @Unquestionable
    @Unquestionable 3 года назад

    The comparison with Moore's work on Supreme definitely rings true the more I think about it. Both maintain a certain air of optimism some of his other stories can lack, with a feeling that even though the heroes might suffer set backs they'll always be around to continue the good fight. Amusingly wasn't aware of the rarity of his Captain Britain run, having picked up the 2002 trade for cover price in the 2000s.