Published: October 1982
Writer: Chris Claremont
Penciler: Frank Miller
Inker: Josef Rubinstein
What's Going On?
Wolverine in recuperating at Yukio's, after his loss to Shingen in last issue. He awakes to find ninja assassins, a group known as The Hand, about to attack. Wolverine protects his new friend, and a bunch of faceless ninja cannon fodder serve their purpose and die.
To repay his debt to Yukio, Wolverine offers to scare (and mmmaybe kill) the crimelord that sent The Hand after her. Little does Logan know that Yukio is secretly working for Lord Shingen; she is tasked with the job of eliminating Shingen's only remaining rival in the Japanese criminal underworld --- and then she is to kill Wolverine! Gasp! Ignorant to all of that, Wolverine helps Yukio get where she needs to go. In the process, Wolverine protects Mariko from an assassination attempt. You would think that would earn the man some points with the little lady, right? Well, to protect her, Wolverine went berserk and slaughtered a bunch of assassins before her eyes. It seems that "savagely killing" is not one of Mariko's turn-ons, so she is horrified and Wolverine is extra depressed as the issue closes.
Worth Noting:
- This is the first time Wolverine faced The Hand, and the first time The Hand were seen outside the pages of Daredevil.
- Yukio as a lusty assassin? Yeah, that happened. Most, if not all, of Yukio's later appearances cast her as a carefree adventurer, rather than a hardened killer. As for her attraction to Logan, I believe that is also something kept to this miniseries.
Art!
I was pretty happy with Frank Miller's pencils in the first issue, but a few things started to bother me in this one. Why is the art so sparse? There are a lot of panels here without any background whatsoever and Miller's attention to detail comes and goes, sometimes noticeably on the same page. The action sequences are all still choreographed well, but I don't know if Miller ever really captures the savagery of Wolverine. Wolverine berserk looks a lot like Wolverine in control to me.
Even with those issues, there are still some stellar pages that play toward Miller's love of the over-the-top.
Ninjas are terrible marksmen, apparently |
Writing!
This issue is interesting, in that it has Wolverine do what he does and he still ultimately loses. That quickly becomes a theme for Wolverine, but this is the first major instance of it I can recall. Really, this is one of the few times to this point where he has been shaken up (the Proteus and Dark Phoenix stories being the others). Claremont keeps the series going with lots of action and some subplot advancement. He was a little less successful with the fleshing out of Yukio, though. This is her first proper appearance, and she comes across as dangerous and mysterious, which is good. It's a little weird seeing her hit on Logan so shamelessly, but it kind of fits her wild character. There are a few points with Yukio, though, that are just painful to read...
Retrospectively Amusing:
- The first page of this issue has Yukio being frightened and pleading for Wolverine to wake up and fight. In no other scene does she act desperate or ask for help, even when surrounded by ninjas about to kill her. The page works on its own, but when you consider the character Claremont was trying to mold here, the same character who plays "chicken" with the bullet train in the next issue, it sticks out like a sore thumb. Issue-to-issue contradictions are pretty common, especially early in a character's development, but page-to-page contradictions are always amusing.
- Yukio introduces her catch phrase in this issue: "Gotcha!" She only uses it in her first few appearances, but it is awkward every time it is used.
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