Crazy science fiction actions abounds as four young mutants quickly dispose of some guy called "Shredder" before tackling crazed robots and adventures across space!
Wait. What?
I was eight just as the TMNT hit America, and lucky enough to have a really good comic store in the vicinity. It was just the right time to be into the new wave of merchandise while being able to grab reasonably priced back issues of the original black and white series.
Believe me, no one on the playground believed when I told them that the Turtles killed Shredder off in the very first issue.
I loved those weird, transgressive stories, and they are just as fun in this amazing reprint.
First of all, the book is amazing quality. It's oversized, so the crisp black and white art can be seen for all the crazy detail. There's fun annotations after every issue where the Turtles' creators breakdown the creation and influences in every issue.
And, holy crap, I can't believe I never saw the Jack Kirby.
Going back in, I assumed I was going to be bathing in Frank Miller love. After all, the whole TMNT saga started as a Daredevil quality. From the beginning, Eastman and Laird point out how the frenetic action and page layout are tributes to comic master Jack Kirby, even pointing out which sequences are influenced by which of Kirby's work. From the in media res openings to the detailed alien technology, I can finally see the Kirby.
Aliens? Oh, yeah. The boys spend more time encountering aliens and being warped across the galaxy than they do fighting ninjas, and it was wonderful. The great appeal of the Mirage Studio books is the anything-goes nature of the stories, where you can never foresee what's coming up next.
And yet it works. Despite that fact that issue #1 was writing by two guys who never believed there'd be an issue #2, the eight issues reprinted here create a full, satisfying storyline that wraps itself up in the end.
These early TMNT days are fun comics, a bolt of creativity from two guys who loved what they did and couldn't believe that they were making money off of it. It takes two or three issues for the different personalities of the turtles to come out, probably because Eastman and Laird suddenly realized they could keep making issues and said, "Holy crap, we need to differentiate these guys!" I didn't care. It was fun from the beginning, and great once they hit their stride. I can sit and stare at some of the art for minutes on end, and the joy of creation is transparent in every annotation.
This is what fun comics should be. Now I have to find an uncut reprint of Tales of the TMNT . . .
PS. The wraparound cover of TMNT #7 is one of the greatest comic covers of all time. Come at me.