(oversized hb; 2021: graphic novel. Collects Moon Knight #21-38; Iron Man #161; Power Man and Iron Fist #87; Marvel Team-UP #144; Moon Knight #1-6 [second run, 1985]; Marvel Fanfare #30, 38 and 39; Solo Avengers #3; and Marvel Superheroes #1.)
From the inside flap
“Moon Knight’s first solo series comes to a close, including the climax of Doug Moench and Bill Sienkiewicz’s artwork continues to evolve before your eyes, he and Moench put their tortured hero through a series of trials—including the return of the waking nightmare that is Morpheus and the vigilante Stained Glass Scarlet, now wielding a crossbow as her weapon of choice. But while encounters with these and other deadly adversaries take their toll, they have nothing on the task of juggling the identities of mercenary Marc Spector, millionaire playboy Steven Grant and cabbie Jake Lockley—not least the strain that puts on his love life. And just as Marlene Alraune starts to doubt their romantic future, her brother gets caught up in the madness—and things go from bad to worse. When a mystery man is inspired to seek power by becoming Moon Knight’s dark nemesis, will the schemes of the Black Spectre drive a final wedge between Marc and Marlene—or perhaps destroy the silver-and-ebon-clad marauder once and for all? Though that task may fall to Moon Knight’s very first foe, the Werewolf By Night—back and more ferocious than ever, as only Sienkiewicz could draw him.
“Other creators take Moon
Knight in new directions as he fights killers, super villains and zuvembies—and
shares adventures with Brother Voodoo, Iron Man, Doctor Strange, Spider-Man,
Power Man and Iron Fist, the X-men, the Fantastic Four, and more. But as he
falls further under the influence of a certain Egyptian god, he emerges
stronger than ever—as the Fist of Khonshu! It’s the dawn of a new era for Marc
Spector, but where does that leave Marlene?”
Overall review
Caveat: (possible) minor spoilers in this review. Part 2 of the review is here. Vol. 1 starts here.
Vol. 2 continues in the dark, pulpy, socially relevant and unsettling dissociative-lead vein of its previous omnibus, with its mostly gritty New York City settings, morally gray characters (some of them returning from earlier issues), making for another t(w)een-friendly read, with its experimental tones, storylines, and other elements. Moon Knight is one of Marvel’s more iconoclastic characters and comic book runs. This is an excellent collection, one worth reading if you’re a lover of pulp, 1980s vibes and artwork, and a seriously disturbed protagonist.
Moon Knight’s original run
went from 1975 to 1984; his second run went from 1985 to 1990.
Review, issue by issue
Moon Knight: “The Master of Night Earth” (#21): Mirebalais, Haiti. Moon Knight [henceforth to be called MK] and Jericho Drum (aka Brother Voodoo) track the revolutionary soldiers in service of coup leader “Grand Bois, leader of the Unholy Trinity, Lord of the Crossroads and Demons. . . the Master of Earth and Night Forests.” While tracking the speedboating soldiers, with help from Daniel (spirit brother of Drum) they encounter violent zuvembies (zombies) and other spooky horrors.
Entertaining, good issue, atmospheric. Always a pleasure to see Jericho and Daniel—they also appeared in Werewolf By Night (issue 39).
Also included in this issue:
another “Tales of Khonshu” story, titled “Murder By Moonlight.”
In “Murder,” a cop-killer (Herb Russell) flees a crime scene and takes
desperate refuge in the Brooklyn Museum, where Khonshu’s statue, along with
mummies, is on display. Fun, EC Horror-esque morality work.
Moon Knight: “The Dream Demon” (#22): Morpheus—last seen in Moon Knight issue 12—terrorizes his former dream-study doctor (Peter Alraune) through nightmares, whose repercussions spill into waking life. Morpheus has been sedated and treated with a new drug to siphon off his mind-blast “ebon energy” (which allows him to create waking-life nightmares), it seems he’s getting more powerful, his black energy infecting others (MK included).
Meanwhile, MK, Frenchie and Marlene Alraune (Peter’s sister, MK’s girlfriend) must also fend off Morpheus’s attacks, psychic and corporeal. Cliffhanger finish.
Also included in this issue: “Khonshu
Tales: Moon Over Alamein”: October 1942. Alamein, Egypt. Two American
soldiers (Ezzie O’Gourke and Davie Wadler) accidentally discover Khonshu’s
alabaster statue in a cave. They leave everything as they find it, and the next
day—no suprise—Khonshu’s influence is felt (anew) by O’Gourke, Wadler, and others.
Another enjoyable Khonshu-in-another-place-and-time mini-story.
Moon Knight: “Perchance to Scream” (#23): Morpheus (aka Robert Markham), escaped from his energized dream-sleep and his asylum-prison, follows MK, Marlene Alraune and her brother (Peter) and Frenchie to Steven Grant’s (aka MK) country cottage with violent and tragic results. Good, intense issue.
The Invincible Iron Man: “If the Moonman Should Fail!” (#161): Members of a subversive technologist group (A.I.M., Advanced Idea Mechanics) trap Tony Stark (aka Iron Man), Steven Grant (aka MK, etc.) and several other people in an ocean-submerged “experimental power generating facility” (Project Neptune), to hold them for ransom. Fortunately, Iron Man and MK are there to deal with the situation. Fun read.
Power Man and Iron Fist: “Heatwave”
(#87): MK is trapped in an empty water tank during a heatwave while
Power Man and Iron Fist track and battle thugs of Commodore Planet, a weapons
smuggler, to rescue the missing-for-days MK. Solid, good issue.
Moon Knight: “Scarlet
in Moonlight” (#24): Scarlet Fasinera’s crossbow crusade against
the mobsters responsible for her son’s death continues. This time she’s
targeting upper echelon mafioso. MK is torn between helping and stopping her.
(Scarlet was last seen in Moon Knight issue 14). Excellent, moody and
emotionally relatable issue, with superb artwork by Bill Sienkiewicz and
Christie Scheele.
Moon Knight: “Black
Spectre” (#25, double-sized issue): A Vietnam vet with PTSD (Carson
Knowles) sets out to become MK’s opposite-number villain—namely Black Spectre,
a medieval-armor-wearing and grudge-bearing agent of sudden violence, wielding
a pike and political influence. Another anything-could-happen, exciting issue.
Moon Knight: “Hit
It!”/”The Cabbie Killer” (#26) –
“Hit It”: A jazz-beat sets the citywide tone and narrative percussion, in which MK must stop a grief-crazed man (Joe) from assaulting everyone around him.
“The Cabbie Killer”: Someone has hired a behemoth of a man in military garb (Commodore Donny Planet) to blow up New York cabbies, and MK means to find out who, one fist fight at a time. Fun story.
Commodore Donny Planet and MK
previously crossed paths in Power Man and Iron Fist, issue 87, also in
this omnibus edition).
Moon Knight: “Cop Killer”
(#27): MK investigates a spate of murders where the victims were
cops, leading him down some unexpectedly character-twisted avenues. Good issue,
featuring an appearance by the Kingpin (aka Wilson Fisk). Good issue.
Moon Knight: “Spirits
in the Sand” (#28): In this especially atmospheric, often spooky
and possibly supernatural issue, MK—traveling as Steven Grant—and Marlene
Alraune return to the desert tomb where Khonshu (might’ve) resurrected Marc
Spector/MK/etc., and where they must survive grave robbers intent on finding
Khonshu’s rumored hidden treasure. Excellent, return-to-MK’s-roots work, one
of my all-time favorite MK issues, between its stellar writing and art.
Moon Knight: “Morning Star”/”Colloquy” (#29)—“Morning Star”: Desperate to hang onto power, a high priest (Schuyler Belial, aka Morning Star) of a comic-book diabolical satanic cult has his followers hunt Jack Russell (aka Werewolf By Night), so Belial can use Russell as a sacrifice to raise a devil. When one of one of MK’s cop buddies (Detective Flint) and MK get involved, things become more complicated. First part of a two-part tale, good story. (Jack Russell’s last appearance in MK was issue 4.)
“Colloquy”:
Steven Grant is revisited by a ghost of his mercenary self (Marc Spector). Solid
reiteration of one of MK’s themes.
Moon Knight: “The
Moon-Wraith, Three Sixes, and a Beast” (#30): Schuyler Belial’s
satanic cult members—first seen in MK issue 29 (“Morning Star”)—continue
to hunt Jack Russell, aka Werewolf By Night. Meanwhile, MK and Detective Flint
try to forcibly surcease the black-robed, pointy-head-hooded cult’s pursuit of
Russell, also MK’s friend. Above-average,
especially pulpy issue, even for the clad-in-white MK.
Moon Knight: “A Box of Music for Savage Studs”/”Fly the Friendly Skies” (#31)—“Fly the Friendly Skies”: On Dough Row—a stretch of an especially impoverished New York tenements—a youthful gang of toughs (Studs), led by the merchant-predatory and loathsome Shank, run violent and wild.
Meanwhile, one of the Studs (Lenny) struggles with his conscience after two of their crimes directly impact his home life, and MK steps in to end the Studs’ reign of intimidation.
“Fly the Friendly Skies”: Eco-terrorists seek to hijack an airship—their leader (Douglas Brenner) means to end mankind’s pollution of the Earth by ending mankind! Of course, MK can’t allow this, so he does his vigilante thing, even after Brenner has him temporarily blinded. Fun, James Bond-ish issue, with its group-of-female-terrorists storyline.
This issue marks Kevin Nowland’s
debut as a MK penciller, taking over for the consistently excellent Bill
Sienkiewicz.
Moon Knight: “When the Music Stops”/“Cancer” (#32)—“When the Music Stops”: Conclusion of the two-part story that began with “A Box of Music for Savage Studs” (MK, issue 31). Lenny, “war chief” for vicious gang leader Shank, sees his personal struggle intensify after one of the strongarmed and potentially vigilante shop owners (Lewis) fights back against the Studs (led by Shank). This story ends on a note of momentary hope, grace, making its two-part arc especially impressive for a comic book.
“Cancer”: The
jaded attitude of a brilliant-but-cold doctor (Dr. Steele) prompts the brother
of a dying cancer victim (Joseph Fixler) to take drastic actions, actions that
draw the attention of Steven Grant/MK. Sad, grim (it almost feels MK-writer
reactionary) tone throughout this issue.
Moon Knight: “Exploding
Myths” (#33): The social-ills/moralistic (and still timely)
tone of “Cancer” (MK, issue 32) carries over into this issue,
with an overly ambitious reporter (Joy Mercado) pushing a small-time criminal
(Druid Walsh, a Vietnam vet) to a big-scale extreme, forcing MK and the fanged
skull-inked behemoth (Walsh) into a fiery conflict atop the Twin Towers. Good
story, eerie end-image.
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