Sunday, April 01, 2007  
Captain Canada Dead?

:: Posted by Bryan @ 4/01/2007 12:01:00 AM
received this via email, from yesterday's National Post:

Captain Canuck Is Dead; National Hero Since 1975
By BRAD McCOY
National Post
Published: March 31, 2007

Captain Canuck, Canada's superhero, is fatally shot by a sniper in the latest issue of his eponymous comic, which arrived in stores yesterday. The assassination ends the guardian of the north's fight for right, which began in 1975.

Captain Canuck, while heading to the Parliament Buildings, is shot and killed.

The last episode in Captain Canuck's life comes after a turbulent publishing career. Created by writer Don Fleishman and artist/co-writer Richard Comedy, the original Captain Canuck first appeared in Captain Canuck #1 (July 1975). The story followed Tom Evans, a Canadian secret agent who gained superhuman strength from contact with extraterrestrials. This first version of the Canadian superhero ran 14 issues, ending in 1981, and was drawn mostly by George Freeman taking over from Richard Comedy. The series was revived in 1993 and again in 2004. In 2006 a fourth incarnation of the character was featured in a new series.

The decision to make the new Captain a woman polarized the superhero fan community. Captain Canuck (whose true identity is Sally Maple) is a staunch feminist and fights for women's rights and multiculturalism. Her adventures often lead her to interact with government officials and to petition the Canadian Parliament in Ottawa.

But in the current issue of her title, Captain Canuck takes bullets in the shoulder and stomach while on the steps of Parliament. The assassin is alleged to be Redcoat, an intelligence agent romantically involved with Captain Canuck. He was apparently under the control of Mr. Gold, a supervillain. "It seemed a little radical when it was first brought up," said Richard Comedy, the president and publisher of Canuck Comics, about the hero's death. "But sometimes stories just take you places."

"We as publishers and as creative people knew where the ending was going to go for a long time," he said. "We knew people might not like it, but I think we delivered a compelling story that made everyone think."

He added: "The stories we have planned dealing with Cap's death are really compelling too."

This is not Captain Canuck's first brush with death. In the 1970s he battled alien invaders and was presumed dead but was actually transported back in time to the period when Vikings first discovered Canada. Years later the character was thawed out to continue his career.

More recently, Kebec, the Captain's francophone partner --who was thought killed by an explosion as he tried to defuse a bomb-- was revealed to be alive. Kebec was saved by sovereignist forces, who put him on ice and thawed him for their own missions. Captain Canuck broke the separatist hold on Kebec, and the two had a brief reunion. Kebec, who has taken on the name Kapitain Kebec, is now on a quest to redeem his actions.

Cultural commentators from the world of comic books have begun to weigh in on the event, expressing opinions on the philosphical and economic underpinnings of the red-and-white clad hero and the implications of her death. Jeet Heer, a Regina-based writer and academic, puzzles over the very existence of a Canadian superhero, implying that the death of Captian Canuck was a forgone conclusion. "Ingrained in the superhero genre is a sense of America's invincibility, its inherent goodness, and its world historical destiny," he says. "National heroes from other country (be they Captain Canuck, England's Union Jack, Frances's Superdupont, or Israel's Shaloman) always seem parodic and desultory. Despite its faltering in Iraq, the United States is the world's only superpower and for that reason it's the only country that creates confident and commercially successful superheroes."

The commercial viability of Captain Canuck may be the main reason for the Captain's death, at least in the minds of some comic book retailers. According to Harold Pottermole, owner of the Sirens' Song bookstore in Toronto, superhero comics and their publishers may be a dying breed. "Everything that these companies do is in complete isolation from true market forces. They are not now, nor have they been for thirty years part of the mass-media. Companies run by fans with comics drawn by fans rarely think of catering to anyone but themselves, which unfortunately means comics aimed primarily at adult men who still want to read comics featuring characters suited to children's entertainment."

Trying to incorporate aspects of the real world --like death and the struggle for women's rights-- into superhero comics is like someone "writing a Berenstain Bears novel for adults," Pottermole adds.

So is this the end of Captain Canuck? "He's very dead right now," Mr. Comedy said.

Still, these are comic books, where characters have a history of dying and returning. Most famously, DC published "The Death of Superman" in November 1992. That comic was a best seller, but the Man of Steel eventually returned to the land of the living in August 1993.

Fans on newsarama.com, a Web site devoted to comic book news, quickly posted their reactions to Captain Canuck's death. They ranged from a cynical "Yeah, right!" and "I know it's temporary" to the more media-savvy: "I'm fairly sure killing Cap with a movie in development would not be very sensible. So, I shall wait and see." Others were even less forgiving: "This is just a blatant attempt to cash in on recent trends in U.S. comics."

Labels: , , , ,

   
         - Stumble It!  - Leave a comment!| 0comments  -  - we honor OpenID - 

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Hi, welcome to the blog! If you want to let us know about an event or share PR, write us at Sequential@Spiltink.Org.

For discussion of posts, corrections or relevant links to the story feel free to fire away and post here! We love hearing from you guys. cheers! :)

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home







Archive by Region
Alberta - British Columbia - Calgary - Gatineau - Halifax - Moncton - Montreal - New Brunswick - Newfoundland - Nova Scotia - Ontario - PEI - Quebec - Saskatchewan - Saskatoon - Toronto - Vancouver - Victoria - Winnipeg -

Archive by Month
August 2002 - September 2002 - October 2002 - November 2002 - December 2002 - January 2003 - February 2003 - March 2003 - April 2003 - May 2003 - June 2003 - July 2003 - August 2003 - September 2003 - October 2003 - November 2003 - December 2003 - January 2004 - February 2004 - March 2004 - April 2004 - May 2004 - June 2004 - July 2004 - August 2004 - September 2004 - October 2004 - November 2004 - December 2004 - January 2005 - February 2005 - March 2005 - April 2005 - May 2005 - June 2005 - July 2005 - August 2005 - September 2005 - October 2005 - November 2005 - December 2005 - January 2006 - February 2006 - March 2006 - April 2006 - May 2006 - June 2006 - July 2006 - August 2006 - September 2006 - October 2006 - November 2006 - December 2006 - January 2007 - February 2007 - March 2007 - April 2007 - May 2007 - June 2007 - July 2007 - August 2007 - September 2007 - October 2007 - November 2007 - December 2007 - January 2008 - February 2008 - March 2008 - April 2008 - May 2008 - June 2008 - July 2008 - August 2008 - September 2008 - October 2008 - November 2008 - December 2008 - January 2009 - February 2009 - March 2009 - April 2009 - May 2009 - June 2009 - July 2009 - August 2009 - September 2009 - October 2009 - November 2009 - December 2009 - January 2010 - February 2010 - March 2010 -