Skateman was a comic book produced by Neal Adams, and published by Pacific Comics in November 1983. It is primarily known as an industry curiosity, a widely derided comic produced by one of comics' most highly regarded and influential creators.
Publication history
One issue of
Skateman was published,
November 1983. Its 19-page lead story was written and drawn by
Neal Adams. Accompanying it were two five-page backup features: "Korlack of Futureworld" by writer and
penciler Jack Arata, and
inker Andy Kubert; and "Rock Warrior" by writer-artist Paul S. Power.
[ Skateman at the Grand Comics Database.]
Fictional character biography
Billy Moon is a
martial arts enthusiast and
Vietnam veteran who has found a career in
roller derby. In the wake of the murder of his best friend by biker gangs, Moon sinks into depression, only to meet a young
Hispanic boy named Paco. Paco's comic-book collection inspires Moon to wrap a scarf around his face and fight crime with his roller skates.
Critical reception
Skateman is primarily known for its artistic failings, despite being the product of the highly regarded and influential comics creator
Neal Adams. Historian
Don Markstein called its protagonist "one (of) the least-acclaimed heroes of all time".
[ Skateman at Don Markstein's Toonopedia; published 2009, retrieved June 2, 2014.
]
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Archived from the original on May 6, 2015. The
Slings & Arrows Comic Guide rhetorically asked, "What was Neal Adams thinking?";
[ the Slings & Arrows Comics Guide; edited by Frank Plowright; published by Top Shelf Productions, 2003 (via Google Books)] and in January 1991, Kitchen Sink Press's
World's Worst Comics Awards listed
Skateman #1 as the worst comic of the previous 25 years.
[ World's Worst Comics Awards (1990) - no. 2, at comicbookdb.com; retrieved June 2, 2014] Similarly,
Tom Orzechowski has stated that
Skateman is "known in the industry as the World's Worst Comic Book".
[ Fallout: J. Robert Oppenheimer, Leo Szilard, and the Political Science of the Atomic Bomb, (page 237) by Jim Ottaviani (via Google Books); published 2001 by GT Labs]
Other criticism came from sources such as cartoonist Francesco Marciuliano, who stated that Skateman could have only fought crime when he wasn't "being hauled in by police for emergency psychiatric evaluations";[ 6 Superheroes That Should Never Have Become Superheroes, by Francesco Marciuliano, at Smosh.com; published April 16, 2013; retrieved June 2, 2014] Heavy.com, which listed Skateman as among the "20 Worst Superheroes"; SFX, which listed Skateman's roller skates as among the "most ludicrous" weapons in comic books;[ BLOG Comics’ Most Ludicrous Weapons, by Matt Risley, at SFX; published April 25, 2011; retrieved June 2, 2014] the Huffington Post, which stated that a film adaptation of Skateman "should never get made";[ 5 Superhero Movies That Should Never Get Made, by Ryan Kristobak, at the Huffington Post; published November 15, 2013; retrieved June 2, 2014] and ComicsAlliance, which called Adams' effort "legendarily terrible".[ Deconstructing the Complete and Utter Insanity of ‘Batman: Odyssey’ , by Laura Hudson; at ComicsAlliance; published March 8, 2011; retrieved June 2, 2014]
The San Diego Reader said that Skateman made Dazzler "seem like Marcel Proust by comparison", and partially attributes the fall of Pacific Comics to "(s)everal palletloads of unsold Skateman comics".[ The History Of Comic Books In San Diego: The '80s, by Jay Allen Sanford; at the San Diego Reader; published September 14, 2008; retrieved June 2, 2014]
External links