(oversized hb; 2019; graphic novel)
Overall review
Caveat: (possible) minor spoilers in this review. Part 2 of the review is here.
Morbius is a fun, distinctive (he’s a living vampire!), and overall good read, although the artwork, between its various illustrators, varies in quality (mostly it’s good though). Its main characters (despite the era-familiar/sexist damsel-in-distress female players) are mostly consistent and generally interesting—bearing in mind that, depending on the title, situations and the writers, Morbius veers sometimes from bloodthirsty maniacal to sympathetic anti-hero. Worth reading and owning, this.
These are the first twenty
issues of the forty-one original issue run.
Review, issue by issue
The Amazing Spider-Man: “A
Monster Called. . . Morbius!” (#101): While
hiding out in Dr. Curtis Connors’s (aka the Lizard) summer house (so Peter
Parker/Spider-Man can undo an unsuccessful experiment), Spider-Man is thrust
into combat with Morbius the Living Vampire for the first time, a situation
that compounds into something worse when another unexpected guest shows up.
The Amazing Spider-Man:
“Vampire at Large!” (#102): Spider-Man, caught
between the Lizard (a transformed Dr. Curtis Connors) and Morbius, tries to
fend them off, secure a serum for his additional four spider-arms, and transform
Connors back into his human self, while subduing (but not seriously harming)
Morbius.
Marvel Team-Up featuring Spider-Man and the Human Torch: “The Power to Purge” (#3): Martine (Dr. Michael Morbius’s distressed fiancée) contacts the Fantastic Four, seeking help in locating her transformed, missing fiancé. One of the four, Johnny Blaze (aka the Human Torch), with help from a combative Spider-Man, locates Morbius and tries to subdue the desperate, blood-deprived vampire—who’s also created another bloodsucker (Jefferson, a political radical, brother of the more even-tempered Jacob).
As one might expect, Blaze and
Spider-Man’s efforts are thwarted by unforeseen complications.
Marvel Team-Up featuring
Spider-Man and the X-Men (#4): Morbius
kidnaps Hans Jorgensen, his former scientific partner, and kills some people. Spider-Man,
suffering from the effects of the Morbius-based cure for his extra four arms (The
Amazing Spider-Man #101-102), tries to stop Morbius, but runs afoul of the
X-Men while doing so. Especially cram-packed with characters and action, this
issue.
Vampire Tales: “Morbius” (#1): This black-and-white illustrated magazine chapter-story shows a guilt-tormented Morbius—recently escaped from the X-men—in Los Angeles, looking for his erstwhile love (Martine). After making accidental friends with a “Children of Satan” cultist “or just a carnie” (Carolyn), she takes him to Madame Laera, a no-frills spiritualist, who also tries to help him locate Martine. While with Madame Laera, they’re attacked by a kill-happy demon (Nilrac).
Especially fun Morbius micro-tale chapter, more bloodthirsty and fearsome than its color-cousin/younger audience mainstream run.
Giant-Size Superheroes: “Man-Wolf at Midnight” (#1): In another effort to procure a cure for his vampirism, Michael Morbius—less maniacal than usual—takes control of the Man-Wolf (John Jameson’s lycanthropic self) with the Moon-Stone, recovered from the East River in New York.
Morbius’s plan also includes
Dr. Harold Ward, a hematologist working on an experimental cure for leukemia,
and only Spider-Man can save Ward and possibly, Jameson/Man Wolf. This simple
clever, self-contained story is fun, above average in its written and visual
execution.
Fear: “Morbius the Living
Vampire” (#20): The titular bloodsucker is
strangely calmed by two men religious faith and science (Rabbi Krause, Reverend
Daemond) is again experimented upon to see if Michael Morbius can be cured of
his need for blood. Unfortunately, the situation goes awry (as it often does),
and Morbius, cognizant of his humane aspects, is forced to stalk a new victim.
Fear: “Project: Second Genesis” (#21): After Morbius’s reluctant attack on Tara (a child who is more than she appears to be), the “man-bat” and the girl are drawn to the Caretakers, ancient, science-smart beings who compel Morbius to confront the traitorous, satanic Daemond, his mysterious female companion and a supernatural “jungle cat” (Balkatar). Another cliffhanger finish, with at least one shocking (for Morbius) twist.
This issue, like the previous Fear issue, casts Morbius in a consistent, well-meaning anti-hero light. This shift (also hinted at Marvel Tearm-Up #3 and 4 as well as Vampire Tales #1) is a promising character- and series-expansive take on Morbius, a sea-change for the character.
Fear: “—This Vampire Must Die!” (#22):
Morbius’s slashing fisticuffs with Balkatar, the intelligent and
English-speaking jungle cat, are interrupted by a summoning by Balkatar’s also-biped/feline
king (Gerark). Gerark has a terrible but seemingly necessary mission for
Morbius, one that means life or death for Gerark’s subjects inside the
mysterious land-prison of “within”—a place Gerark and his people are unable to
escape.
Fear: “Alone Against Arcticus” (#23): In a land bordering the “within”, Morbius meets the denizens of Arcturus, a mix of cyborgs, a mutated super-race, and occasional humans—all of whom were subjugated by Gerark the wild-cat king and his ilk long ago, and all of whom seek to free themselves.
Fear: “Return to Terror!” (#24): Lord I (eye-faced, telepathic “potentate of Arcturus”) and Morbius return to our terrestrial realm where, surreptitiously espied by the Caretakers, the living vampire tangles with a bewildered Blade the Vampire Slayer.
Vampire Tales: “The Blood
Sacrifice of Amanda Saint” (#2): In the
more adult-oriented Vampire Tales chapter-tale, Morbius confronts
another satanic cult, that of Demon-Fire, led by high priestess Poison Lark and
her monstrous lieutenant (Katabolik), so that Morbius might save the virginal Amanda
Saint from their “Triad of Solomon” sacrifice that would leave Saint dead.
Cliffhanger finish to this fun, fast-moving (if stock-Morbius) microtale.
Vampire Tales: “Demon-Fire” (#3): Morbius
interrupts Poison Lark (Amanda Saint’s murderous sister Catherine) and
Katabolik’s mausoleum sacrifice of Amanda Saint to the spider demon Arachne,
while “sweet, silly Justin”—Amanda’s love interest—reveals hidden depths. Also
mentioned by Poison Lark: “the arcane text of Lemegeton”.
Vampire Tales: “Lighthouse of the Possessed” (#4): Amanda Saint and Morbius, having dismembered the San Francisco-based cult of Demon-Fire, head to Lovecraftian eerie Malevolence, Maine, to find Amanda’s mother and father, the former of whom (like Catherine/Poison Lark) joined Demon-Fire’s cult.
Shortly after their arrival in
Malevolence, Morbius and Amanda are attacked by its citizens, most of whom are
possessed by a skeletal-clawed hell fiend (Bloodtide), summoned by Amanda’s
mother. At least one Scooby-Doo-esque end-twist makes this Vampire
Tale especially fun.
Vampire Tales: “Blood Tide” (#5): Morbius and Amanda Saint continue to fend off attacks by the Bloodtide-possessed citizens of Malevolence, Maine—this time with help from locals Brock Killbride (a naïve political optimist) and the more cynical Arlene Randolph, while Monte Harris, a shady political consultant for Mayor Duke Mannery, skulks around the eerie town. Then Bloodtide shows up! Mayhem ensues.
Multi-POV storytelling issue
highlights this issue, cutting between the story’s core characters.
Vampire Tales: “Where is
Gallows Bend” (#7): In Gallows Bend, Nevada, Amanda
Saint and Morbius, continue looking for Saint’s long-disappeared father. More minions
of the Demonfire cult—notably Death-Flame—torture Morbius and Amanda with
hallucinatory horrors in the Old West-style town. Appropriately melodramatic,
crazy story with jarring POV shifts, something that highlights the rest of the
Demonfire storyline.
Vampire Tales: “High Midnight” (#8): Howie Rivers (owner of the Old West town Gallows Bend, Nevada), his caretaker (Sagebrush Robbins), Morbius and Amanda Saint face off against Apocalypse and his hench-creatures (griffins, Reaper, Phineas T. Coroner, others) in the mostly satisfying conclusion to Morbius’s Demonfire story arc.
Like the previous six Vampire Tales entries, the characters and atmosphere are laid on thick, the writing’s locquacious and for “mature audiences”, and there’s multiple POVs throughout (this time these POVs effectively gel).
Amanda Saint, self-aware heroine, gets short-shrifted in the Demonfire arc, often little more than a damsel in distress (especially by today’s standards) despite her intelligence and willingness to fight villainy.
Fear: “And What of a Vampire’s
Blood. . .?” (#25): Picking up from Fear #24,
separate from the Vampire Tales storyline: Caught between the
10,000-year-old Caretakers and the demon-priest Daemond, whose long war
threatens all, Morbius and the psychically powerful girl-child Tara confront
Daemond anew—a conflict Daemond seems likely to win.
Fear: “A Stillborn Genesis!”
(#26): Character-based twists abound as the war between Daemond
and the Caretakers comes to a head. Fun, wild wrap-up to the Caretakers/Daemond
storyline.
Werewolf By Night: “Giant-Size Werewolf” (#4) – “A Meeting of Blood”: Michael Morbius (“the living vampire”) is reunited with his amnesiac fiancée, Martine, who may lead him to more than love, when a wolf-mode Jack Russell crosses their path and attacks them, possibly undoing Morbius and Martine’s shot at a sweet new life.
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