Flesh (comics)

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Flesh featured on the cover of 2000AD#3. Art by Ramon Sola.
Flesh featured on the cover of 2000AD#3. Art by Ramon Sola.

Flesh is a recurring comic strip in the weekly anthology comic 2000AD created by writer Pat Mills.

Contents

[edit] Publishing history

Flesh first appeared as part of 2000AD's opening line up in its first issue in 1977. The series was set in the age of dinosaurs who were farmed for their meat by cowboys from the future. The series was initially planned by Mills to be in Action, but after that title suffered censorship, Mills held the story back for his next project which eventually became 2000AD.

The strip followed a similar path to Hook Jaw, one of the strips Mills had written in Action, in that it featured humans trying to dominate nature for their own purposes before being eaten by sharks in Hook Jaw and dinosaurs in Flesh. Mills' original story also shows some influence from Westworld as the frontier town on which the plot focuses is policed by an android and tourists treat the Dinosaurs as a theme park attraction. The first book ran for the first 19 issues of 2000AD as well as the 1977 annual.

Flesh Book One proved popular but the series was not mentioned again until during the Judge Dredd story The Cursed Earth when Satanus (a dinosaur cloned from son of Old One Eye, the main dinosaur from the first Flesh story) appeared in the course of that story. Following this appearance the series returned in Flesh Book Two in issue 86, which was written by Kelvin Gosnell and drawn (with the exception of the last two episodes) by Massimo Belardinelli. The series again proved popular and ran until issue 99.

Further books followed in issues 800-808 and 817-825, written by Mills and Tony Skinner with art by Carl Critchlow, and issues 973-979 written by Dan Abnett and Steve White with art by Gary Erskine and Simon Jacob.

[edit] Bibliography

The dinosaurs have made a number of appearances over the years:

  • Satanus: "Unchained!" (by Pat Mills and Colin MacNeil, in 2000 AD #1241-1246, 2001)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links