OR: "Hi-yo, Silllver...!"
After spending I don't know how much time configuring my new phone recently (remember when we only had to buy a phone off the shelf, take it home, and plug in the phone line?), I later began to think back to how often in the comics world phones had frustrated our favorite characters or otherwise been the bearer of bad news. It's the type of bits-and-pieces post that can wrack your brain in trying to recall from memory the scenes that would fall into such a category--but the diversion made for good fun, and part of the enjoyment of a scavenger hunt is the hunting, after all.
Here, then, are a few scenes where "Ma Bell" reigned supreme, and whoever was on the other end of the line wasn't very happy about it. In short, compared to spending a little time adjusting our phone settings, you and I are getting off easy. (Unlike our friend, the Wizard.)
No doubt Peter Parker received his fair share of bad news, whether it was related to a girlfriend or news that something dire had befallen his Aunt May. In this case, suddenly sprouting four extra arms would probably make anyone curt with a loved one who wanted to go out on the town; on the other hand (heh, get it?), as often as women seem to complain about a date getting "handsy," Gwen should count her blessings that Peter didn't head right over.
Avengers can also relate to getting hung up on, whether it's through a phone headset or a video call. Take the time the team was stripped of their priority privileges just as Avengers began disappearing right and left, and nobody in official channels was taking their calls.
And when Tony Stark was having his problems with alcohol addiction, his friend James Rhodes, who began filling in for him as Iron Man, was forced to make a call on his behalf and tender Iron Man's resignation from the Avengers.
And don't think that being Captain America gives a caller any pull with the phone company, whose operators have no doubt heard it all from parties on the other end of the line.
In fact it seems that handling callers presents more of a problem for FF members than facing down super-villains. Witness how the Invisible Girl falls to pieces while on monitor duty, just from fielding an inquiry from her son's governess:
Meanwhile, Luke Cage, making his business calls from a public phone booth, is just asking for trouble.
Alert reader David P. phones in with two more examples for us. First up is budding young actress hopeful Juliette D'Angelo, who's trying to reach Johnny Storm--but given who's on the other end of the phone, she's dialed a very wrong number.
There's no good news in Westchester, either, where Spider-Man has made a frantic call to warn the X-Men of the threat of Arcade--but our assassin has a little warning of his own for Spidey.
But it would be Tony Stark who would win this horse race hands down, since he's on call for any emergency that threatens his company. (And brother, when it comes to Stark, a phone line ringing with bad news happens a lot.)
An honorable mention goes to Stark's close friends, Happy Hogan and Pepper Potts, whose marital problems at one point had telephones ringing off the hook.
Funny enough, Marvel itself got into the ring... er, swing of things here by putting out an annual of its promotional publication, Marvel Age, which pulled all of its characters from stories featured in 1985 and placed them in situations where they were interrupted by a ringing telephone--titled, appropriately, "Information, Please...!", as Kurt Busiek phones every group and hero on the issue's cover to solicit story material for Marvel, while each scene pulls its weight in letting the reader know what plot is currently taking place in the characters' respective books. Unfortunately, Mr. Busiek is hung up on more than once.
Given the general theme here, can you name the individual carefully inserted into the back of the horde of characters pictured on the Marvel Age annual's cover? You might need your magnifying glass.
As someone who pounds the snooze button on his alarm clock three or four times in the morning, I'd hate to see what Ben Grimm would do to one of those.
ReplyDeleteM.P.
Captain America really needed a cellphone in that situation, if only they'd existed back then. On the other hand, where would he keep his phone when his costume has no pockets?
ReplyDeleteI was floored when Spider-Man managed that, Colin. As for Cap, those belt/hip combat packs he began wearing in the Brubaker period could have helped with that. (I never saw him pull so much as an aspirin out of those packs, so they seemed like accessorizing more than of practical use.)
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ReplyDeleteHi,
I'm a relatively new reader of this blog and enjoying it very much.
Just wanted to give a shout-out to an enraged Spider-Man seemingly exploding a phone booth when reaching Arcade at the X-Mansion (in the first instance of Arcade subduing and kidnapping that powerful mutant team with ease...he'd be such a successful assassin if he'd just shoot 'em right then and there).
And of course, the even more classic John Byrne sequence of Annihilus answering the phone at the Baxter Building while the team was in the Negative Zone (I can't recall if he wrecked that phone, it seems to me his phone courtesy was surprisingly on point).
-david p.
Welcome aboard, David--and right you are, those are excellent examples! Thanks for mentioning them, and you'll find them added. :)
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ReplyDeleteHey, I wasn't expecting that!
Thanks!
david p.
One phone call that resonated with me came in Avengers #186 (1979). Actually, it's two phone calls. Captain America confronts the recently introduced Henry Gyrich, who denies the Avengers permission to fly to aid the Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver. Cap has all he can take, he can takes no more, so he strides off to make a phone call. The next page, Gyrich takes a phone call that makes the little dictator swallow his gum. Permission is granted to the Avengers to go.
ReplyDeleteThat's an excellent one as well, Murray! I don't think anyone will shed a tear at Gyrich being throttled back in embarrassment. (Though he did get the last word on the Vision, the pest.)
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