Marvel Premiere 15 (1974)
For the first installment of Iron Fist 101 I wanted to cover
a few things. Those early issues, the
ones we’re starting with, will have a lot of black and white pictures. I don’t own the originals; I own the
phonebook sized Essential Iron Fist.
When I can find a colored version of the page or panel I want to show
off I’ll use it, but there will times I’ll have to use the black and white
issues. These Essential black and white
pages also lead into the early Power Man and Iron Fist book which we will be
covering. The last thing I wanted to
mention about this before we get started is this project is going to take a
long time. Some times (like today) I’ll
talk about a single important issue, other times I’ll cover a few issues. My Iron Fist library is pretty large and I
honestly expect to still be doing Iron Fist 101 this time next year. With all that said, let me get started at the
beginning.
Marvel Premiere was an anthology book that ran for 61
issues. It introduced new characters or
showcased characters that no longer had their own series. Iron Fist ran in Marvel Premiere from issue
15 until issue 25 when he received his own book. That first issue is written by Roy Thomas and
illustrated by Gil Kane. It also starts
very different, in that the captions read as if you were Iron Fist. After years and years of reading comics, it
was a very jarring change. That first
captions read:
You are Iron Fist. You stand tensely – too tensely – aware of their eyes on you: Yu-Ti, the Hooded One, and his four Dragon-Kings…
And Facing you, four others edge closer, searching for an opening – a moment of weakness – the careless flickering of an eyelid.
For, this is your Day of Destiny, Iron Fist. You will eat of the fruit of the Tree of Immortality – or else drink deep of the Elixir of Death--!
That’s a lot to take in.
We have Iron Fist fighting four other people while the hooded Yu-Ti
watches on with the Dragon-Kings who wear masks that look to be scaled like a
dragon’s skin. Yu-Ti seriously looks
like the hooded Cobra Commander.
Starting in Marvel Premiere 16 Larry Hama will actually take over art
duties, so I would think it’s pretty safe to say the origin of Cobra Commander’s
hooded design start with Yu-Ti. Iron
Fist defeats the four men easily and at which point Yu-Ti tells him to think
about himself before facing the next challenge.
And here is where the flashbacks start.
We learn that ten years ago a nine year old Danny Rand was
tracking across the “snow-crusted Asian wastes” with his parents (Wendell and
Heather Rand) and his father’s business partner Harold Meachum. Wendell wants to take them to the city of K’un-Lun. As they are crossing a ice bridge Danny and
Heather fall down to a lower ledge.
Wendell begins rescue his family when Harold betrays him. Literally digging his boots into Wendell’s
hand until the older Rand has to let go and fall to his death. The book makes sure we see that he bounces
off his head in a bloody mess on his way down too.
Harold wants to save Heather and Danny; in essence he wants
to steal Wendell’s family and his half of the company. Heather is willing to die instead of joining
the man who just killed her husband, so the first part of the flashback ends
with Meachum leaving them on the ledge.
Iron Fist snaps back to the present to face a giant masked fighter
Shu-Hu. We are told Shu-Hu is “He whose
lips are pledged to silence and whose name means lightning…and whose fists are
like twin thunder bolts!” Iron Fist hits
on the giant seem to have no effect and Shu-Hu is as fast as he is strong. As the hero of the book struggles to fight
his opponent he returns to his flashback.
Danny and his mother make the climb to safety and then start
through the snow. They don’t know where
they are going and find themselves being tracked by a large pack of
wolves. They finally find a rope bridge
and head for it. Halfway across Heather
realizes that the wolves will overtake them soon. She sends Danny further across while she
charges the wolves. Moments later a mysterious
group of archers show up and shoot the wolves, it is too late for his
mother. At the age of nine Danny has
seen his father’s head cracked open on an icy mountain and his mother eaten by
wolves. Take that Batman.
Back to his challenge, Shu-Hu shoots a dagger out of his palm and hits Iron Fist in the shoulder. The thought of his parents drives Danny into a rage and he begins kicking and punching Shu-Hu. Finally he focuses his chi into his hand until it becomes “like unto a thing of iron.” This punch takes off Shu-Hu’s head and reveals that his opponent was actually a robot. Iron Fist stands triumphant and we are told that he will now have to choose between immortality and death. We have to wait until the next issue for that though because that announcement is where Iron Fist’s first issue wraps up.
A lot happens in the first issue. There are crazy names, crazy masks, a super
dark origin story, and a robot. One of
the other interesting things in his issue is that in about half of the panels
you can see Iron Fist’s eyes when he is wearing his mask. Check back next week for part two of Iron
Fist 101.
Credits: Writer Roy Thomas, Penciler Gil Kane, Inker Dick Giordano, Colorist Glynis Wein, Letterers L.P. Gregory
Credits: Writer Roy Thomas, Penciler Gil Kane, Inker Dick Giordano, Colorist Glynis Wein, Letterers L.P. Gregory
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