Sunday, April 20, 2014

Wolverine / Cable: Guts and Glory

Guardian doesn't appear in the book below, but James MacDonald Hudson does.


In Guardian's early appearances, right up to his first "death" in Alpha Flight #12, he seemed like a decent guy.  Sure, he was considred the antagonist when he twice attempted to recover Wolverine for the Canadian government, but he clearly wasn't evil, he was just a good little soldier doing his job. In fact, he was doing a job he didn't really want.

But from time to time, that hasn't been enough.  Writers have, on occasion, painted Mac as being so concerned with making Department H work that he would make highly questionable decisions for any shred of success.

This is such a book.

Guts and Glory has a publishing date of October 1999, as if the exaggerated musculature and huge-ass firearms weren't enough of a clue that it came out in the 90's.  As stated on the cover above, Stephen Platt provided the pencils with seven (??!!!) credited inkers completing the art.

The story takes place prior to Alpha Flight really becoming a thing.  Wolverine appears to be the only official agent at this point.  He is in "Northern Canada" (that covers a lot of ground, doesn't it?) enjoying a cigar after getting laid (I'm serious) when Mac interrupts his afterglow.


The "disturbance" is caused by a big bastard called D'Von Kray who followed Cable through time to kick his ass. Wolverine takes him out in no time and Department H hauls him in. To what end?  Well...


Sure.  He wiped out Moose Jaw, but we'll just give him Canadian citizenship so he can be in Alpha Flight. 

But sure enough, just a week later...


That was one intense week of research!

As if you need me to tell you, D'Von Kray escapes and heads for the States to give Cable a good whuppin'. Wolverine is able to track him and the two heroes work together to take him down and...well...that's pretty much it.

As much as I dislike the notion that Mac might have done some pretty lousy things in order to keep his program going, I can't discount that it's happened a number of times in his history (always in flashback, mind you).  I suppose it's not outrageous that when the possibility of the department being dropped presented itself, Mac may have taken an "the ends justify the means" approach for the greater good, but it clashes with his personality as it was displayed by Chris Clarement in the early New X-Men books and by John Byrne in the first dozen Alpha Flight issues.