Stormwatch: Team Achilles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stormwatch: Team Achilles

Art by Whilce Portacio
Publisher Wildstorm/DC Comics
Schedule Monthly
Publication date 2003-2005
Number of issues 23
Main character(s) Stormwatch: Team Achilles
Creative team
Writer(s) Micah Ian Wright
Penciller(s) Whilce Portacio, C. P. Smith, Clement Sauve, Carlos D'Anda, Mark Texeira, Tomm Coker,
Creator(s) Micah Ian Wright
Whilce Portacio

Stormwatch: Team Achilles is an American super-hero series, the third incarnation/revision of the Image comics Stormwatch.

This version was penned by Micah Ian Wright and drawn variously by Whilce Portacio, C. P. Smith, Mark Texeira, Tomm Coker, Carlos D'Anda, and Clement Sauve. The longest run for a penciler on the book was by C. P. Smith, who drew issues 11-19. The title featured covers by Portacio, Jason Pearson and Michael Golden.

Contents

[edit] Overview

Stormwatch: Team Achilles differed from the previous super-hero-centric Stormwatch groups in that it centered on a team consisting mostly of 'normal' human beings from various global Special Forces/Counter-Terrorist organizations acting as a small UN troubleshooting team. The stated mission of Team Achilles was to kill or capture criminal superhumans.

The title was a super hero action series layered with satire of both politics and comic books. Real-world politics often entered the book with a storyline where the team replaced a Strom Thurmond/Jesse Helms-like Senator with a shape-shifting African superhuman and another where George Washington, reincarnated as a patriotic hero resembling Captain America, tried to overthrow the American government. The book threw potshots at President George W. Bush (rare and controversial in the comics world, especially in the pro-Bush, pro-war America of 2002-2003), it mocked the ineptitude of the United Nations, and made light of modern pathos-driven corporate superheroes with clear mockeries of a Doctor Doom-like armored dictator character, the Justice League, the X-Men, Superman, and even Wildstorm's own premiere superhero team, The Authority, all with a witty, sarcastic flair which showed the creators' love of comics even while they were kicking them in the teeth.

Some fans have happily called Team Achilles "G.I. Joe for Grownups" and noted comics writer Kurt Busiek wrote "it's like Sgt. Rock, but with Superheroes." Although the enemies in the comic book have been the typical fantastic archetypes seen in comics, the weapons used by the Stormwatch team were mostly real-world weapons systems (such as the Barrett M82A1). Realistic weapons as well as tactics are used by the non-powered Team Achilles members to take down the physically superior enemies seen in the comic.

[edit] Controversy

The book debuted to controversy from the first issue, which, due to changes in DC's printing schedule, came out not in October 2002, but instead on September 13th, 2002, the one-year anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks. To compound the problem, the first issue featured a terrorist superhuman attack on the United Nations, which many readers thought was intended to comment on the 9/11 attacks themselves, and thus in poor taste.

Because Team Achilles (like all previous Stormwatch groups) was a United Nations entity, the book often dealt with realistic political details such as the U.S.'s refusal to pay its U.N. dues, political interference with the goals of the U.N. by conservative American politicians, and the U.N.'s own ineptitude and corruption. In the charged political air, the book accurately reflected the disdain that President George Bush and his administration displayed toward the United Nations.

Detractors of the comic disliked the political tone of the book. Released during a time when the American public was 88% in favor of the Afghanistan War,[1] George W. Bush enjoyed a 65% approval rating,[2] and 72%[3] of the public supported the invasion of Iraq, the book took shots at conservative politics in general, "weapons of mass destruction", the Department of Homeland Security, America's paranoia about terrorism and the accompanying culture of fear, and, some felt, President Bush himself. Although the President in the Wildstorm universe was not specifically named after any known politician, some readers stated online that they felt that the mumbling, incomprehensible, racist Southern murderer depicted in the book was a clear mockery of George Bush.[citation needed]

Additionally, many superhero fans disliked and disbelieved the concept that 'normal' human beings could ever hope to defeat superheroes. This was notable, given that the main concern of DC Comics (WildStorm's parent company) was to revive and promote 'traditional' pure superhero comics over the darker characters pioneered by Image.[citation needed]

[edit] Cancellation

Sales were never stellar on the book due to these and other problems. Wildstorm's inability to hold a steady art team led to 10 different art teams penciling and inking the first 12 issues, with wildly different results. By the time the book settled on the pencils-and-inks team of C. P. Smith and Eric Nguyen for a 12-issue run, many readers had already given up. When news of the book's cancellation spread, artist Smith leapt to Marvel Comics to work on The Invaders, cuing the arrival of two new art teams for issues 20-23.

Inter-company issues also reputedly had a lot to do with the book's eventual cancellation. DC Comics was uneasy with the concept of the "Eye of the Storm" Mature Readers line of superhero comics from the beginning.[citation needed] DC's more New York corporate culture had previously clashed with the risk-taking laid-back approach of the San Diego-based Wildstorm over the adult content in The Authority, for example, and there was lingering bad blood between the two companies from the troubles on that book.[citation needed] It's telling that the 2006 Wildstorm comic title The Boys by Darick Robertson and Garth Ennis, which was essentially the exact same concept of Team Achilles (a group of intelligence agents attempting to police the world's superhumans) was killed by DC Comics over the exact same content issues that led to problems with The Authority & Team Achilles.

Accordingly, the DC Sales division never did much to promote Team Achilles except for distributing a free poster for retailers with issue #1.[citation needed] Although every issue of Team Achilles was packed with in-house advertising for Vertigo's Mature Readers comics, no Eye of the Storm ads ever ran in Vertigo's comics.[citation needed] Wildstorm's creators bitterly complained that they had been launched with no support net - no sales incentives were attempted or overshipments of books carried out by DC during the run of those books.[citation needed] Even a last-ditch attempt to promote the entire line by holding a crossover event, Coup D'etat, a 5-issue mini-series where the Wildstorm Universe reacted to The Authority seizing control of world government, was buried by DC,[citation needed] despite the first book in the series being penciled by Wildstorm founder, fan favorite Jim Lee.

First and foremost, though, the entire Mature Readers "Eye of the Storm" series pointed out a fundamental flaw in the traditional comic book marketplace. Due to repeated entrapment and convictions of innocent comic store owners who sold clearly marked adults-only material to undercover police officers, many stores in conservative states in the South and Midwest will not order any Mature Readers titles.[citation needed] While not filled with sex, there were some adult relationships in Team Achilles and copious of swearing. Many conservative comic store owners wouldn't carry the book because of all the swearing, and many conservative comics customers wouldn't buy the comics for the same reason.[citation needed]

Additionally, many comics readers find the concepts of "Mature Readers" and superheroes to run antithetical to one another.[citation needed] This type of reader tends to believe superhero comics should be about good, clean family fare and teenage power fantasy. It should be pointed out that no "Mature Readers" line of superheroes books has ever succeeded in the marketplace for exactly these reasons, include Marvel's vaunted MAX line of books - the retail fact is that there are just not enough "Mature Readers" consumers to support a line of books like this.[citation needed] While "Mature Readers" pioneer Vertigo Comics has stayed alive for over a decade, they do so by paying creators a much lower pagerate, using a cheaper, lower grade of paper, and using flat coloring which can be done far cheaper than anything which ever appeared in Team Achilles, and by appealing to readers out of the comics reader mainstream.[citation needed]

Because of all these problems, the entire "Mature Readers" line of Wildstorm books were never big sellers.[citation needed] The sister series WildCats 3.0 was canceled on the same day as Team Achilles.[citation needed] Rumors persist that DC Comics, uncomfortable with the content and cost of the Eye of the Storm line, shut down the Mature Readers WildStorm titles in order to put Wildstorm's artists and writers to work on mainstream DC titles[citation needed] - Wright, for example, was scheduled to write a Vigilante mini-series with Team Achilles artist Carlos D'anda, and Whilce Portacio was moved to Batman.

StormWatch: Team Achilles was canceled in mid-story. Wright wasn't told that #24 would be the final issue until 2 weeks before he was due to turn in the script, a full two months after the artist had been informed. The day he submitted his changed script which tied up loose ends of the story in a satisfying way, however, Wright was fired, and #23 ended up being the last issue published. Wright's revised script for Stormwatch #24 is online.[4]

[edit] Characters

[edit] Assault Team

Benito Santini - American of Italian Descent, Catholic. Was previously a field leader of International Operations' Black Razors. When John Lynch defected from I.O., he became the Director of Operations, only to lose his post when Ivana Baiul became the Executive Director. After various events in the Wildstorm universe, Santini was later assigned to be the new "Weatherman" to the Stormwatch team, although it's later revealed he has his own agenda to the matter. Despite this, he holds his team members in high regard. Married to Flint.

Blake Coleman - Santini's second-in-command of Stormwatch, field leader and best friend since their Black Razor days, Coleman is the chief on-the-ground commander for the team's early missions, until his untimely death.

Luis Cisco - A close friend of Satini and Coleman who served with them during their Black Razor days. He was scheduled for a leave of absence due to his impending marriage, but ended up joining the team for one last mission on his wedding day. During the course of the mission, the same one that saw the death of Coleman, he received injuries that resulted in his leaving the team.

Victoria "Flint" Ngengi - Formerly of the original Stormwatch team and of the same generation as the Authority's Swift, Flint is only the second superpowered individual on the assault team. Possessing superhuman strength and a high level of resistance nearing that of physical invulnerability, Flint is the team's door kicker. She later falls in love with and marries Santini.

Jukko Hämäläinen - Finnish, former member of the Osasto Karhu (Finnish Anti Terror Squad). One of the last survivors of a superhuman holocaust in that country, and initially the only superhuman-powered member on the assault team. Jukko's powers are more of a curse than a blessing: he feels the pain of any individual within a certain radius. This is one of the reasons this team operative is incredibly caring towards injured hostages, while highly lethal against enemy targets. He also seems to have a profound dislike of the Authority's Midnighter.

Jaeger Weiss - A member of the German GSG 9, Weiss is an incredible handsome, suave, and more often than not sarcastic, but highly reliable team member. He is easily recognizable by the face mask he wears to protect his face when on missions. Being a member of GSG 9, Weiss is often depressed when hostages are injured during operations. Due to the fact that his entire family was killed by superhumans he harbors a distrust of the superpowered individuals on the team. Nevertheless, he is still good friends with Jukko--the pair often engaging in witty banter on and off mission.

Galena Golovin - Russian sniper, one of the more aggressive team members, is a perfectionist of few, often harsh words. Shares an 'interesting' relationship with her spotter, Pickney.

Charles Cottsworth Pickney - Formerly of the British SAS, his military career stopped dead after he shot his CO in the head in front of the Queen. It didn't seem to matter that his CO was possessed and attempting to assassinate the Queen, his upward mobility ceased and he ended up assigned to Team Achilles. Pickney is almost stereotypically British in demeanor. As spotter to Golovin, he and Golovin share an odd, often argumentative relationship with Golovin either commenting on Pickney's degrading vision or less-than satisfactory manhood.

Ajeet Singh - A Sikh Indian, Ajeet Singh was one of the last "official" Stormwatch members to join the group. He was called into service following Citizen Soldier's attempt to over throw the US government, and first saw action during the groups raid on Baron Blood's castle. He was given the option of leaving the group following The Authority's take over of the United States, the idea being that he was so new The Authority would be unaware of his existence. He refused and remained with the group until the series cancellation.

Frederick "Alias" Ngebe Braumholstein - Frederick is a post-human with shape-changing abilities, and is one of the few metahuman members of Team Achilles. He was brought in following Santini's removal of Senator Sonny Terns, using his shapechanging powers to impersonate the Senator. In a rather ironic twist the Senator was a white conservative racist while Frederick is a liberal South African. During his time impersonating the Senator he helped get through various liberal bills and financial aid for various African American organizations. During Citizen Soldier's attempted over throw of the US government his true identity was revealed, forcing him to abandon his mission and join the Team Achilles field team for the first time. He was given the option of leaving the group follow The Authority's take over of the United States, it was thought that due to the covert nature of mission and the fact that he had never worked with the field team, that The Authority would be unaware of his existence. He refused and remained a member until the series cancellation.

[edit] Support Team

Khalid Tefibi - Stormwatch's resident tech geek, and the individual most often made the butt of jokes by the more masculine, hard-charging members of the team. Nonetheless, Tefibi's technological skills and wit prove vital to the teams' success and later their ultimate survival. Further, Colonel Santini reveals in Stormwatch: Team Achilles #16 that he is grooming Tefibi to be his replacement. In Santini's words: "That's why I'm prepping you now, Tefibi...I need someone capable of taking over if I get greased." Tefibi then expresses utter despair at the prospect of such responsibility. Santini recruited Khalid Tefibi from a federal prison where he was spending time for hacking into the Pentagon.

Avi Barak - A member of the Israeli Defense Force, Barak is an "inductive telepath" first introduced in issue 4: his powers are such that, if he asks you a question, and you do not answer truthfully, he instantly absorbs the information from your mind. Through Santini's efforts, his power level is raised to a much higher rating, although it has left the psi a little less than balanced.

Dr. Marie Grunier - Recruited from the French Gendarmerie, Grunier serves a dual role as the teams medical doctor and, when needed, as the teams hostage negotiator. She was romantically linked to Haamalainen.

Buzz Dixon - Originally a StormWatch reservist, the creature known as Buzz Dixon was later recruited by Colonel Benito Santini as his chief scout and gatherer of difficult-to-get information on the Achilles team. Dixon handles nearly all of the team's recon work as Team Achilles' scouting specialist and primary intel-gatherer. He is often the first on the field, as he reconnoiters mission targets and locations pre-insertion. Buzz Dixon is a quadrupedal being possessing compound eyes, large, fan-shaped ears, and chameleon-like skin that allows him to become nearly invisible. Due to his unique optical, olfactory, and auditory physiology, Dixon possesses super-human senses. He also has a "sixth sense" in the form of low-grade telepathy (He can mentally "speak" in others' heads and receive thoughts, but generally only if they are nearby.). Further, Buzz Dixon can cling to walls with the sucker-like pads on the bottoms of his feet, and he possesses a prehensile tail. Despite his completely inhuman appearance, Dixon's personality suggests that he is human, or at least possesses a psyche very much like human beings. He is loud-mouthed, boisterous, swears quite a bit (he is partial to "fuck"), uses current slang, and has the sort of stereotypical mannerisms of a cowboy-type or jarhead-type character. Due to his personality and human name, it can be argued that Buzz Dixon is a super-powered meta-human who was once human, but whose powers are manifest through a strange physiology that also stripped him altogether of his human appearance. However, he shows no distress over his esoteric physiology. Dixon had very little "screen time" in the StormWatch: Team Achilles series, and his origins can only be conjectured.

[edit] Other Notable Characters

  • Baron Chaos - Baron Kemeny Zsigmond von Chaos first came into conflict with Team Achilles during his attempt to seize control of Romania. He held his own against several members until the intervention of the teams telepath, Avi Barak. He was stripped of his armor and then shot in the head and left for dead, only to be inadverdantly rescued by The Authority. He was brought aboard the Carrier where the Authority were able to save his life with the intention of finding out the whereabouts of Team Achilles, but with the aid of a naive nurse named Mandy he managed to escape to New York City where he promptly made his way to the Romania embassy to plot his revenge. Not long after he was contacted by Jumpmaster who had been contacted by Senator Terns from The Project Entry Universe. Together, Baron Chaos, Citizen Soldier and Senator Terny concotted a plan to rid themselves of Team Achilles once and for all. Baron Chaos is clearly a homage to the Marvel Comics character, Doctor Doom. Both have horrible facial scars, both are Eastern European, and both wear high tech suits of armor that provide them with an array of offensive and defensive capabilities including, flight, energy blasts, enhanced strength, teleportion and force fields. More telling is the similar personalities of both characters: They are both uncannily resilient, arrogant, self-assured, and refer to themselves in the third person. Baron Chaos also has several sets of the armor as backups, including one stashed in the Romanian embassy in New York City.
  • Citizen Soldier - Citizen Soldier is the constantly-reincarnating spirit of George Washington, although Santini is not aware of this: the Soldier's earliest indentified incarnation was Major Alexander Abernathy, a member of the Union Cavalry during the Civil War. Stormwatch had information on every incarnation up until 1947 when he apparently vanished from the public eye. The Citizen Soldiers during this time were later revealed to have been assassinated for various reason by members of the US government, including Junior Senator Sonny Terns. In 2003, Citizen Soldier resurfaced in the form of Steve Gatesniak, a multi-billionaire computer enterpreneuer. For over 20 years Citizen Soldier had built up his wealth while assembling an army of loyal followers and employees who would help him dispose of, what he believed to be, the hopelessly corrupt US government. He began his attack by robbing The Federal Reserve on Wall Street, the same attack which resulted in the death of Blake Coleman. Following this he launched various attacks upon the Senate, the Supreme Court, the global satellite network, the stock market and more. During this time he also projected his own memories into the heads of American citizens via their dreams, showing them the various demises of past incarnations. Ultimately Stormwatch was able to foil his plans and were about to apprehrend him with plans to place him in a cryogenic holding unit preventing any further reincarnations, when he was killed by a member of Ivana Baiul's Civil Defense Administration known as Giant. Soon after Citizen Soldier manifested in the body of a newborn illegal Chinese immigrant. He was last seen in the Project Entry universe. Citizen Soldier displayed a number of powers, most notably was his above average speed, strength and combat ability. He also had the power to temporarily instill normal humans with superhuman powers, similar to that of an Christine Trelane and other Seedling Activators. Unlike a normal Activator however, these powers were limited to a few hours and would ultimately kill the person they were bestowed upon. It was implied that this was because other Activators triggered latent powers in those possessing them, while he could trigger powers for those with no inner potential. He also wielded a circular shield in a manner similar to that of Captain America. In addition to his army and the temporary superhumans he could create, Citizen Soldier also had several superhuman allies that he didn't make. These include:
Deadhead - A superhuman with the ability to animate the dead and a skull for a face. He was captured and later placed in the Project Entry Universe along with Sonny Terns and Dhul Fiqar.
Jumpmaster - A superhuman with the ability to create star shaped teleportation portals. He escaped Stormwatch and would later be seen acting as an intermediary between Senator Terns, Baron Chaos and Citizen Soldier.
Emoticon - A powerful telepath who was also hideously deformed. He resemble a giant mutant fetus and during his first and only appearance in the series was shown to be floating in a giant liquid filled tube. He was killed by Golovin.
  • Senator Sonny Terns - Sonny Terns is the product of Southern Royalty. His family owned large tracts of land dating back several generations, beginning with his great-great-great-great grandfather, Augustus Terns who started the family fortune with his success in the slave trade. He first encountered Santini during a hearing regarding UN funding of his new Stormwatch unit. Terns was steadfast in his resolve to quash the unit, delaying the budget approval for quite a while. Later he would also be connected to Ivana Baiul, the UN Special Security Council, and the superpowered Arab terrorists who attacked the UN in the first three issues of the series. Shortly after the attack on the UN, Santini, along with Weiss and Tefibi, confronted and kidnapped the Senator, holding him in a secret wing of their detention facilities beneath the UN, it was during this time that 'Alias' would assume the Senator's identity. He was held in secret until the events of Coup D'etat forced Team Achilles to abandon their UN base. At this point Santini stranded him on a tropical island on Project Entry's Earth along with Deadhead and Dhul Fiqar, two other Team Achilles prisoners. He remained on the island until the end of the series when he escaped with the help of Deadhead. Tern then contacted Baron Chaos and the remained of Citizen Soldiers forces, and together the trio hatched a plot to finally do away with Santini and Team Achilles. Terns was also a low-grade "psychic broadcaster" capable of projecting his thoughts into the minds of others.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Series & one-shots

  • Stormwatch: Team Achilles #1 - 23 (September, 2002 - August, 2004)
  • Coup D'Etat: Stormwatch Team Achilles (April 2004)

[edit] Significant stories

  • Stormwatch: Team Achilles #0 - a six-page story from Wizard Magazine #129 (July, 2002).
  • Eye of the Storm Annual 2003 (July, 2003)

[edit] Collections

  • Stormwatch: Team Achilles vol. 1 (collects #0,1-6, 160 pages, July 2003, ISBN 1-4012-0103-2)
  • Stormwatch: Team Achilles vol. 2 (collects #7-11, Eye of The Storm Annual #1, 176 pages, January 2004, ISBN 1-4012-0123-7)
  • Stormwatch: Team Achilles vol. 3 (collects #12-19, 192 pages, scheduled for August 2004 but postponed indefinitely, ISBN 1-4012-0289-6)
  • Coup D'etat (collects "Coup D'etat" #1-5, 160 pages, November, 2004, ISBN 1-4012-0570-4)

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

[edit] External links