Rat_Pack_(comics)

Rat Pack (comics)

Rat Pack (comics)

British comic book story


"Rat Pack" is a British comic war story published in the weekly anthology Battle Picture Weekly from 8 March 1975 to 8 July 1978 by IPC Magazines. Set during World War II, the story follows the eponymous unit, a penal military unit of four criminals recruited by British Army officer Major Taggart to undertake deadly missions.

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Creation

After Pat Mills and John Wagner were charged with creating Battle Picture Weekly for IPC Magazines. Gerry Finley-Day was one of the writers they turned to after positive experiences working with him on girls' comics, particularly Tammy. Finley-Day was later be honest that the concept "was simply a rip-off of" war film The Dirty Dozen. The editorial team originally wanted Carlos Ezquerra to draw the strip after spotting his work in DC Thomson titles. After some difficulty locating the uncredited artist via his agent, Ezquerra agreed to work on the strip, but only around his extant DC Thomson work until he could be sure Battle Picture Weekly was a success.[1]

Publishing history

As a result of Ezquerra's commitments numerous artists filled in on the strip, including Massimo Belardinelli, while the format of standalone six-page stories saw several writers rotate on the strip.[2] It nevertheless a hit with readers.[1] "Rat Pack" appeared in the first issue of Battle in March 1975 and initially ran until January 1976,[3] but would return periodically due to reader demand.[4] Alan Hebden would eventually become the main writer. He remembered he felt there were too many characters, and frequently pitched killing off Rogan as he "was the deserter and nobody ever liked that".[5]

From 29 January 1977 the strip featured a crossover with Major Eazy (who took command of the Pack after they abandoned Taggart and were then forced to rescue him by new commanding officer Eazy), and was renamed as "Major Eazy versus Rat Pack" in reference to the antagonistic relationship between the characters; it was the first crossover between characters in Battle Picture Weekly - something which was rarely done in British anthologies at the time. Battle editor Dave Hunt would later admit the story was created as a solution to keep both popular characters in the comic while making room for new stories such as "Johnny Red". Ezquerra drew the strip but would later note he enjoyed Major Eazy's solo adventures more; like Hedben, he felt there were too many characters in "Rat Pack".[6] After a year out of the comic, the team returned for a final time after Terry Magee took over as Battle editor, this time as a serial[4] until June 1980.[3]

An episode of "Rat Pack" was reprinted by Egmont Publishing in a 2009 Classic Comics special edition of Battle Picture Weekly.[7][8] The following year Titan Comics collected the first group of stories in the hardback Rat Pack: Guns, Guts & Glory (Volume 1);[9] despite the name, no further volumes followed.

Since 2016, the rights to the story have been owned by Rebellion Developments.[10][11] Two years later in August 2018, they issued a new 3-part comic series Sniper Elite: Resistance by Keith Richardson and Patrick Goddard, a spin-off from the PlayStation 4 game Sniper Elite. The story, set in German-occupied France in 1941, included an appearance by the Rat Pack.[12] In 2020 Rebellion issued a collected edition of "Major Eazy vs. Rat Pack" as part of their Treasury of British Comics range,[13] while Garth Ennis would write a new story for the same year's Battle Action Special one-shot.[14]

Plot summary

Four inmates imprisoned in Wessex Military Prison's maximum security wing in 1941 - Kabul 'the Turk' Hasan (a Cypriot who attacked a superior officer), Ronald Weasel (a safecracker who attempted to rob a Paymaster's Office, Ian 'Scarface' Rogan (a deserter from the Highland Infantry) and Matthew Dancer (a Commando caught looting) find their cells unlocked and escape.

They find out they have been sprung by Major Taggart, who plans to turn them into a crack special operations team in return for being released from prison. Despite the four convicts hating each other almost as much as they hate Taggart and various attempts to murder, abandonment and exploitation the 'Rat Pack' carry out numerous successful missions behind enemy lines.

Collected editions

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References

  1. Bishop, David (26 August 2003). "None But The Brave". Judge Dredd Megazine. No. 209. Rebellion Developments.
  2. Holland, Steve (2002). The Fleetway Companion. Rotherham: CJ & Publication.
  3. Bishop, David (21 October 2003). "The Killing Fields". Judge Dredd Megazine. No. 211. Rebellion Developments.
  4. Jewell, Stephen (18 September 2018). "Alan Hebden Interrogation - Running with the Pack". Judge Dredd Megazine. No. 400. Rebellion Developments.
  5. Bishop, David (23 September 2003). "They Were Expendable". Judge Dredd Megazine. No. 210. Rebellion Developments.
  6. Loveday, Samantha (24 March 2009). "Egmont bringing back mag classics". Licensing.biz. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2011.

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