Cla$$war

Cla$$war

In which a bunch of cynical, burnt-out, and horny superheroes, created by an ex-Nazi scientist with a thing for human experimentation, dress up in stars-and-stripes costumes and fight America’s wars. But when one of the members of the team (he’s just called “American”) develops a conscience the world’s mightiest heroes are soon fighting among themselves.

With a synopsis like that I was expecting something very much along the lines of The Boys, and that’s what Cla$$war is. But Cla$$war actually came first, running from 2002 to 2004 while The Boys was 2006-2012. And Marvel’s Civil War storyline, which also shares some similarities to what we get here, kicked off in 2006 as well. Actually, at the time Cla$$war was thought to have been influenced by DC’s The Authority, but Rob Williams says he didn’t know The Authority before he started writing and that his inspiration was more drawn from the Noam Chomsky he’d been reading.

The title, complete with dollar signs, is a bit misleading. In fact, I’m not sure why it was chosen. Nothing in the comic addresses class war in the sense of economic exploitation and the effects of entrenched social inequality. Instead, its target is American imperialism. The Enola Gay team (that’s what they’re called) are more supersoldiers than superheroes, fighting alongside the troops in foreign countries while the political rot deepens at home.

I wasn’t thrilled by the story here, not because of any political leanings (I like Chomsky too) but because the political message wasn’t new. The references here are up to date, with the president that American begins by attacking (he publicly brands the word “LIAR” on his forehead) being a stand-in for George W. Bush, and the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq being referenced as earlier forays by Enola Gay. But it also felt a lot like the 1970s, with the Vietnam War and the political conspiracy thrillers of the time. And the invasion of Glenada is clearly a reference to the 1983 invasion of Grenada.

That said, I came away thinking this is a comic that should be better known. Perhaps being published by Com.x, a smaller British comic publisher, meant it didn’t get as much exposure. I thought the art by Trevor Hairsine and Travel Foreman was first-rate, and while the story was pedestrian I liked the way the different characters sparked off one another. American is a bit of a stick, but the other members of Enola Gay, while jerks, have distinct and complicated personalities. And the new superfreak the Nazi doctor whips up in his lab had real potential. I wanted to read more about all of these guys, but for whatever reason the series didn’t continue. It was initially planned to run for 12 issues but they only did six. As things stand the story breaks off, with only the character of Heavyweight now removed from the picture. Twenty years later I doubt we’ll see the series continued, at least in the way Williams might have intended. But I wouldn’t be surprised if we get a sequel.

Graphicalex

12 thoughts on “Cla$$war

  1. Yeah the title does sound odd after you lay the story out like that. Nut your right, I’ve never read it and it sounds interesting even though the broader beats have been done before.

    Like

    • The thing is The Boys (the comic I mean, I haven’t seen the show) was so extreme they might have figured they couldn’t really compete with it. But whatever the reason I agree that it’s hard to imagine them continuing this storyline after a twenty year hiatus. Maybe reboot the characters but have them doing different stuff.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Do you think people would be interested though? Didn’t the Boys comic end after a small sized run? That kind of stuff seems to have limited appeal that works against it being a financial success, however modest.

        Like

      • I think The Boys had a pretty long run, as far as these things go. Admittedly a niche “adult” market is going to limit you a bit and a lot of these series set out to have limited runs. Sort of like cable series. Even the most popular (Sopranos, Mad Men, The Wire) are going to wrap up in five or six seasons.

        Liked by 1 person

      • I just looked it up. 72 issues is a decent run. But that started at DC, so they had money behind them before going with a small press.
        Sounds like Classwar never had that advantage and it showed.

        Like

Leave a reply to Fraggle Cancel reply