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Revolver (British comics)

Revolver was a British monthly comic anthology published by Fleetway Publications from July 1990 to January 1991. The comic was designed as a monthly companion title to Crisis and was intended to appeal to older readers than other Fleetway titles in order to take advantage of a boom in interest in 'adult' comics. Revolver was not a commercial success, and lasted just seven issues before being cancelled and merged with Crisis.

Revolver
The cover of Revolver #2 (dated August 1990) featuring Rogan Gosh, art by Brendan McCarthy.
Publication information
PublisherFleetway Publications
ScheduleMonthly
FormatOngoing series
Publication dateJuly 1990 – January 1991
No. of issues7
Creative team
Created bySteve MacManus
Editor(s)Peter Hogan

Creation edit

After a strong start and an alarming dip sales of Fleetway Publications' mature reader anthology Crisis had levelled out at a reasonable level. The title's editor Steve MacManus was also made group editor for the newly defined '2000 AD' group, consisting of the fortnightly Crisis and the long-running science fiction weekly 2000 AD, as well as any spin-offs. Revolver had initially been conceived as a high-quality export title to run alongside Crisis some two years earlier, but internal upheaval had seen the book delayed repeatedly. However, Fleetway scored a major hit by licensing a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles weekly just as the franchise hit critical mass, and MacManus was finally given the greenlight to make monthly companion titles for Crisis and 2000 AD (the latter becoming Judge Dredd Megazine) by managing director John Davidge.[1] MacManus picked Peter Hogan, who had primarily been involved in the music industry working for the likes of Rough Trade and IRS Records as well as music magazines, feeling he would have "his finger on the pulse". For his assistant Hogan recruited Frank Wynne, an Irishman with a vast knowledge of European comics and was known to Michael Bennent, who was in turn being groomed to take over as editor of Crisis. An unsuccessful applicant for the assistant editor of Revolver was David Bishop, who nevertheless impressed MacManus and would later find work on Judge Dredd Megazine. With his design work for Crisis having received a positive response, Rian Hughes was assigned to style Revolver.[2] The name was chosen to emphasise the diverse content of the comic[3] and in reference to the name of the acclaimed Beatles album.[4]

The format was settled on as 52 pages, in full colour. Unlike the political bent of Crisis, MacManus decided Revolver would have a more eclectic mix of genres more in line with the IPC Magazines anthologies he had begun working on, but aimed at an older readership. He began assembling stories for the comic, with the same improved creator benefits as used for Crisis. A Jimi Hendrix biography by music journalist Charles Shaar Murray (based on his book Crosstown Traffic) had been in the offing since the beginning, and was greenlit with Floyd Hughes (who had contributed some work to Crisis) as artist, aided by the so-called Second Summer of Love giving a major spike in interest in psychedelia. Grant Morrison, well known to MacManus from his work on 2000 AD and on good terms with MacManus after he stepped in to publish the controversial "The New Adventures of Hitler" after its original publication Cut folded, approached Fleetway with a plan for a revisionist take on Dan Dare; with the 40th anniversary of the character's debut in Eagle approaching, Morrison began working on the story with Hughes as artist. Hogan commissioned another psychedelic-influenced strip in the form of "Rogan Gosh" from Peter Milligan and Brendan McCarthy and "Happenstance and Kismet" from Marvel UK veterans Paul Neary and Steve Parkhouse, as well as recruiting Shaky Kane and Julie Hollings from Deadline to create "Pinhead Nation" and "Dire Streets" respectively. The final strip in each issue would be a rotating one-off, a format used by MacManus with some success in the pages of Crisis.[2][1]

Promoting the comic was difficult for publicist Igor Goldkind due to Revolver's diffuse subjects, and at MacManus' suggestion he eventually went with the slogan "Where Dan Dare meets Jimi Hendrix", making the same connection between comics and music as the well-received Deadline[2] and to take advantage of a boom in sixties nostalgia.[5]

Publishing history edit

At £1.65 per issue, Revolver was at the time the most expensive regular British comic ever put on sale. A buoyant MacManus announced "I don't think that there's any doubt in anybody's mind that it's going to be a success; the only question is how big it is going to be".[1] As with the launch of Crisis, the creative staff were sent on a nationwide signing tour.[2]

However, despite high hopes Revolver was cancelled after just seven issues. The cancellation took most of the title's staff by surprise, though the final issue was able to include a farewell message, avoid starting any new stories and advertising that "Dare" and "Happenstance and Kismet" would be continuing in Crisis.[1][2][6] A planned update of "Tyranny Rex" by John Smith and John Hicklenton and "Forever England" by Morrison and Paul Grist were both switched over to Crisis, but failed to crystallise before Crisis itself was cancelled in October 1991, while other commissioned material was placed in a pair of specials.[1] MacManus was later told Revolver had lost Fleetway £750,000 over its brief run. The cancellation was swift enough that there was little chance to investigate why Revolver was selling poorly; MacManus would later speculate that it was being displayed with children's comics in some newsagents[2] while in others the comic being marked for 'mature readers' saw it placed with pornographic magazines.[7]

Stories edit

Dare edit

Published: July 1990 to January 1991[6]
Writer: Grant Morrison[6]
Artist: Rian Hughes[6]

Dan Dare is retired, and a puppet of regime intent on exploiting both humans and Treens alike.

Dire Streets edit

Published: July 1990 to September 1990, November 1990 to January 1991[6]
Writer/artist: Julie Hollings[6]

Disaster-prone Kaz negotiates the pitfalls of house sharing and university life.

Happenstance and Kismet edit

Published: July 1990 to January 1991[6]
Writer: Paul Neary[6]
Artist: Steve Parkhouse[6]

The misadventures of jazz musician Monty Happenstance and translator Lucius Kismet.

Pinhead Nation edit

Published: July 1990 to January 1991[6]
Writer/artist: Shaky Kane[6]

The rantings of a large man with a tiny head.

Purple Days edit

Published: July 1990 to January 1991[6]
Writer: Charles Shaar Murray[6]
Artist: Floyd Hughes[6]

A journey into the life and mind of Jimi Hendrix.

  • 'Book One' concluded in the final issue of Revolver.

Rogan Gosh edit

Published: July to December 1990[6]
Writer: Peter Milligan[6]
Artist: Brendan McCarthy[6]

Rogan Gosh is a loutish Indian time traveller and Karmanaut, out to stop Kali's attempts to destroy time and cause chaos all of his own.

One-off stories edit

  • Nine Inches to the Mile
Published: #1 (July 1990)[6]
Writer: Igor Goldkind[6]
Artist: Phil Winslade[6]
  • God's Little Acre
Published: #2 (August 1990)[6]
Writer: Ian Edginton[6]
Artist: D'Israeli[6]
  • Plug into Jesus
Published: #4 (October 1990)[6]
Writer: Gary Pleece[6]
Artist: Warren Pleece[6]
  • The Crossing
Published: #4 (October 1990)[6]
Writer/artist: Al Davison[6]
  • Circular Motion
Published: #5 (November 1990)[6]
Writer/artist: Simon Harrison[6]
  • Martello Nation
Published: #6 (December 1990)[6]
Writer/artist: Keith Page[6]
  • The Secret Garden
Published: #7 (January 1991)[6]
Writer: Terry Hooper[6]
Artist: Aiden Potts[6]
  • 51 Stars
Published: #7 (January 1991)[6]
Writer/artist: Ed Hillyer[6]
  • Zen and the Art of Shopping
Published: #7 (January 1991)[6]
Writer: Tony Allen[6]
Artist: Shanti[6]
  • Did I? Did I? Did I in My Own Self Shine?
Published: #7 (January 1991)[6]
Writer/artist: Brendan McCarthy[6]
  • All Around the World
Published: #7 (January 1991)[6]
Writer: Si Spencer[6]
Artist: Sean Phillips[6]

Spin-offs edit

  • Revolver - The Horror Special (1 edition, 1990)[6]
  • Crisis Presents the Revolver Romance Special (1 edition, 1991)[6]

Collected editions edit

Title ISBN Publisher Release date Contents
Dare 9781853862113 Xpresso Books 1991 Material from Revolver #1-7 and Crisis #56
Rogan Gosh: Star of the East 9781853862533 Vertigo Comics 1994 Material from Revolver #1-6
Yesterday's Tomorrows: Rian Hughes' Collected Comics 9780861661541 Knockabout Comics 12 July 2007 Material from Revolver #1-7 and Crisis #56
Yesterday's Tomorrows: Rian Hughes' Collected Comics 9781607063148 Image Comics 1 February 2011 Material from Revolver #1-7 and Crisis #56

Reception edit

Writing for Comics Bulletin in 2011, columnist Regie Rigby praised Revolver for its varied approach and laid-back demeanour, comparing it positively to Crisis.[8] Designer Rian Hughes would later opine the title was "too scattergun - Hendrix and Dare in one magazine?", and felt the stories were not all of good quality, though he had positive memories of working with Hogan, MacManus and Davidge.[1]

Accolades edit

Revolver was given the 1991 UK Comic Art Award for 'Best New Publication'.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Berridge, Ed (11 November 2018). "Four-Colour Classics: Too Much Too Young - The Story of British Adult Comics Part Three". Judge Dredd Megazine. No. 277. Rebellion Developments.
  2. ^ a b c d e f MacManus, Steve (7 September 2016). The Mighty One: Life in the Nerve Centre. 2000 AD Books. ISBN 9781786180544.
  3. ^ "NEWSWATCH International: All Change at Fleetway". The Comics Journal. No. 130. Fantagraphics. July 1989.
  4. ^ British Comics: A Cultural History. Reaktion Books. December 2011. ISBN 9781861899620.
  5. ^ Hasted, Nick (February 1992). "British Market Frustrating for Women Cartoonists". The Comics Journal. No. 148. Fantagraphics.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au Holland, Steve (2002). The Fleetway Companion. Rotherham: CJ & Publication.
  7. ^ "Mature Comics Struggle to Survive in Britain". The Comics Journal. No. 146. Fantagraphics. April 1991.
  8. ^ Rigby, Regie. "Fool Britannia: 'These I Have Loved - Part Three: Six Shooting!'", Comics Bulletin (2011).
  9. ^ "British Awards Announced". The Comics Journal. No. 142. Fantagraphics. June 1991.

External links edit

revolver, british, comics, revolver, british, monthly, comic, anthology, published, fleetway, publications, from, july, 1990, january, 1991, comic, designed, monthly, companion, title, crisis, intended, appeal, older, readers, than, other, fleetway, titles, or. Revolver was a British monthly comic anthology published by Fleetway Publications from July 1990 to January 1991 The comic was designed as a monthly companion title to Crisis and was intended to appeal to older readers than other Fleetway titles in order to take advantage of a boom in interest in adult comics Revolver was not a commercial success and lasted just seven issues before being cancelled and merged with Crisis RevolverThe cover of Revolver 2 dated August 1990 featuring Rogan Gosh art by Brendan McCarthy Publication informationPublisherFleetway PublicationsScheduleMonthlyFormatOngoing seriesPublication dateJuly 1990 January 1991No of issues7Creative teamCreated bySteve MacManusEditor s Peter Hogan Contents 1 Creation 2 Publishing history 3 Stories 3 1 Dare 3 2 Dire Streets 3 3 Happenstance and Kismet 3 4 Pinhead Nation 3 5 Purple Days 3 6 Rogan Gosh 3 7 One off stories 4 Spin offs 5 Collected editions 6 Reception 6 1 Accolades 7 References 8 External linksCreation editAfter a strong start and an alarming dip sales of Fleetway Publications mature reader anthology Crisis had levelled out at a reasonable level The title s editor Steve MacManus was also made group editor for the newly defined 2000 AD group consisting of the fortnightly Crisis and the long running science fiction weekly 2000 AD as well as any spin offs Revolver had initially been conceived as a high quality export title to run alongside Crisis some two years earlier but internal upheaval had seen the book delayed repeatedly However Fleetway scored a major hit by licensing a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles weekly just as the franchise hit critical mass and MacManus was finally given the greenlight to make monthly companion titles for Crisis and 2000 AD the latter becoming Judge Dredd Megazine by managing director John Davidge 1 MacManus picked Peter Hogan who had primarily been involved in the music industry working for the likes of Rough Trade and IRS Records as well as music magazines feeling he would have his finger on the pulse For his assistant Hogan recruited Frank Wynne an Irishman with a vast knowledge of European comics and was known to Michael Bennent who was in turn being groomed to take over as editor of Crisis An unsuccessful applicant for the assistant editor of Revolver was David Bishop who nevertheless impressed MacManus and would later find work on Judge Dredd Megazine With his design work for Crisis having received a positive response Rian Hughes was assigned to style Revolver 2 The name was chosen to emphasise the diverse content of the comic 3 and in reference to the name of the acclaimed Beatles album 4 The format was settled on as 52 pages in full colour Unlike the political bent of Crisis MacManus decided Revolver would have a more eclectic mix of genres more in line with the IPC Magazines anthologies he had begun working on but aimed at an older readership He began assembling stories for the comic with the same improved creator benefits as used for Crisis A Jimi Hendrix biography by music journalist Charles Shaar Murray based on his book Crosstown Traffic had been in the offing since the beginning and was greenlit with Floyd Hughes who had contributed some work to Crisis as artist aided by the so called Second Summer of Love giving a major spike in interest in psychedelia Grant Morrison well known to MacManus from his work on 2000 AD and on good terms with MacManus after he stepped in to publish the controversial The New Adventures of Hitler after its original publication Cut folded approached Fleetway with a plan for a revisionist take on Dan Dare with the 40th anniversary of the character s debut in Eagle approaching Morrison began working on the story with Hughes as artist Hogan commissioned another psychedelic influenced strip in the form of Rogan Gosh from Peter Milligan and Brendan McCarthy and Happenstance and Kismet from Marvel UK veterans Paul Neary and Steve Parkhouse as well as recruiting Shaky Kane and Julie Hollings from Deadline to create Pinhead Nation and Dire Streets respectively The final strip in each issue would be a rotating one off a format used by MacManus with some success in the pages of Crisis 2 1 Promoting the comic was difficult for publicist Igor Goldkind due to Revolver s diffuse subjects and at MacManus suggestion he eventually went with the slogan Where Dan Dare meets Jimi Hendrix making the same connection between comics and music as the well received Deadline 2 and to take advantage of a boom in sixties nostalgia 5 Publishing history editAt 1 65 per issue Revolver was at the time the most expensive regular British comic ever put on sale A buoyant MacManus announced I don t think that there s any doubt in anybody s mind that it s going to be a success the only question is how big it is going to be 1 As with the launch of Crisis the creative staff were sent on a nationwide signing tour 2 However despite high hopes Revolver was cancelled after just seven issues The cancellation took most of the title s staff by surprise though the final issue was able to include a farewell message avoid starting any new stories and advertising that Dare and Happenstance and Kismet would be continuing in Crisis 1 2 6 A planned update of Tyranny Rex by John Smith and John Hicklenton and Forever England by Morrison and Paul Grist were both switched over to Crisis but failed to crystallise before Crisis itself was cancelled in October 1991 while other commissioned material was placed in a pair of specials 1 MacManus was later told Revolver had lost Fleetway 750 000 over its brief run The cancellation was swift enough that there was little chance to investigate why Revolver was selling poorly MacManus would later speculate that it was being displayed with children s comics in some newsagents 2 while in others the comic being marked for mature readers saw it placed with pornographic magazines 7 Stories editDare edit Main article Dare comic strip Published July 1990 to January 1991 6 Writer Grant Morrison 6 Artist Rian Hughes 6 Dan Dare is retired and a puppet of regime intent on exploiting both humans and Treens alike Continued in Crisis Dire Streets edit Published July 1990 to September 1990 November 1990 to January 1991 6 Writer artist Julie Hollings 6 Disaster prone Kaz negotiates the pitfalls of house sharing and university life Happenstance and Kismet edit Published July 1990 to January 1991 6 Writer Paul Neary 6 Artist Steve Parkhouse 6 The misadventures of jazz musician Monty Happenstance and translator Lucius Kismet Continued in Crisis Pinhead Nation edit Published July 1990 to January 1991 6 Writer artist Shaky Kane 6 The rantings of a large man with a tiny head Purple Days edit Published July 1990 to January 1991 6 Writer Charles Shaar Murray 6 Artist Floyd Hughes 6 A journey into the life and mind of Jimi Hendrix Book One concluded in the final issue of Revolver Rogan Gosh edit Main article Rogan Gosh comics Published July to December 1990 6 Writer Peter Milligan 6 Artist Brendan McCarthy 6 Rogan Gosh is a loutish Indian time traveller and Karmanaut out to stop Kali s attempts to destroy time and cause chaos all of his own Later collected by Vertigo Comics One off stories edit Nine Inches to the Mile Published 1 July 1990 6 Writer Igor Goldkind 6 Artist Phil Winslade 6 God s Little Acre Published 2 August 1990 6 Writer Ian Edginton 6 Artist D Israeli 6 Plug into Jesus Published 4 October 1990 6 Writer Gary Pleece 6 Artist Warren Pleece 6 The Crossing Published 4 October 1990 6 Writer artist Al Davison 6 Circular Motion Published 5 November 1990 6 Writer artist Simon Harrison 6 Martello Nation Published 6 December 1990 6 Writer artist Keith Page 6 The Secret Garden Published 7 January 1991 6 Writer Terry Hooper 6 Artist Aiden Potts 6 51 Stars Published 7 January 1991 6 Writer artist Ed Hillyer 6 Zen and the Art of Shopping Published 7 January 1991 6 Writer Tony Allen 6 Artist Shanti 6 Did I Did I Did I in My Own Self Shine Published 7 January 1991 6 Writer artist Brendan McCarthy 6 All Around the World Published 7 January 1991 6 Writer Si Spencer 6 Artist Sean Phillips 6 Spin offs editRevolver The Horror Special 1 edition 1990 6 Crisis Presents the Revolver Romance Special 1 edition 1991 6 Collected editions editTitle ISBN Publisher Release date Contents Dare 9781853862113 Xpresso Books 1991 Material from Revolver 1 7 and Crisis 56 Rogan Gosh Star of the East 9781853862533 Vertigo Comics 1994 Material from Revolver 1 6 Yesterday s Tomorrows Rian Hughes Collected Comics 9780861661541 Knockabout Comics 12 July 2007 Material from Revolver 1 7 and Crisis 56 Yesterday s Tomorrows Rian Hughes Collected Comics 9781607063148 Image Comics 1 February 2011 Material from Revolver 1 7 and Crisis 56Reception editWriting for Comics Bulletin in 2011 columnist Regie Rigby praised Revolver for its varied approach and laid back demeanour comparing it positively to Crisis 8 Designer Rian Hughes would later opine the title was too scattergun Hendrix and Dare in one magazine and felt the stories were not all of good quality though he had positive memories of working with Hogan MacManus and Davidge 1 Accolades edit Revolver was given the 1991 UK Comic Art Award for Best New Publication 9 References edit a b c d e f Berridge Ed 11 November 2018 Four Colour Classics Too Much Too Young The Story of British Adult Comics Part Three Judge Dredd Megazine No 277 Rebellion Developments a b c d e f MacManus Steve 7 September 2016 The Mighty One Life in the Nerve Centre 2000 AD Books ISBN 9781786180544 NEWSWATCH International All Change at Fleetway The Comics Journal No 130 Fantagraphics July 1989 British Comics A Cultural History Reaktion Books December 2011 ISBN 9781861899620 Hasted Nick February 1992 British Market Frustrating for Women Cartoonists The Comics Journal No 148 Fantagraphics a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au Holland Steve 2002 The Fleetway Companion Rotherham CJ amp Publication Mature Comics Struggle to Survive in Britain The Comics Journal No 146 Fantagraphics April 1991 Rigby Regie Fool Britannia These I Have Loved Part Three Six Shooting Comics Bulletin 2011 Archived at the Wayback Machine British Awards Announced The Comics Journal No 142 Fantagraphics June 1991 External links editRevolver at the Grand Comics Database Revolver contents listing at Barney database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Revolver British comics amp oldid 1217482170, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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