With this week's release of Marvel's "Black Knight" #1 -- not to be confused with DC's similarly named space zombie epic -- creators Tom DeFalco and Ron Frenz are revisiting the age of Camelot to reveal the long-lost origin of the Black Knight and the the sword that's basically Excalibur in one of those Evil Mirror Universe Goatees from "Star Trek," Chaos the Doombringer!We're not gonna lie: That sounds pretty awesome, and it's gotten us thinking about the other great comics that have been inspired by the legend of King Arthur, so we've knighted Sir Christopher of Sims as our champion and charged him with listing off the best comics inspired by Arthurian Legend!

What's more, the characters in "Mage" aren't just based on mythological heroes, they're also modeled after Wagner's comics industry friends: Matchstick is an idealized version of Wagner himself (even losing his hair to a lightning bolt around the time that Wagner was thinning out on top), Hercules stand-in Kirby Hero was based on writer/artist Bernie Mireault, and strangest of all, as writer Chris Roberson revealed in an episode of the War Rocket Ajax podcast, the reincarnation of Beowulf was based on "Hulk" (and "Teen Wolf Too") writer Jeph Loeb!

"C3K", as we are pretty sure no one has ever called it, was DC's first maxi-series and one of the first comics made exclusively for the comic shop market (as opposed to the newsstand). This allowed Barr to take some risks with the format that he otherwise wouldn't have gotten away with in 1982, including recasting Sir Galahad as a samurai (IN SPACE!) and reincarnating both Tristan and Isolde as women, leading them to what we think was the first comic book use of lesbian space-knights.

Rick Veitch's "Aquaman"
Veitch kept up the themes for his run, even going so far as to parody Disney's "Sword in the Stone" with a scene of Aquaman and his sidekick transformed into fish, but it didn't stick, and Aquaman ended up being rebooted yet again, this time into Conan-of-the-Sea. As for his status now... who knows?

The issue even includes cameo appearances by a few other DC characters inspired by Arthurian Legend, like...


Even putting aside the fact that Dr. Doom is a bad enough dude to keep a time machine chilling in his basement, the story of the two armored characters fighting on opposite sides of the Arthur/Morgan conflict and then having to turn to each other to get back to their own time is full of great moments from both characters. Our favorite: The meeting with King Arthur, where Iron Man proves his Future-Man status by levitating the throne with a magnetic field, while Doom just straight up reminds everybody that he's a king and doesn't do tricks.
And we're not the only ones who like it either: Writers Bob Layton and David Michelinie reunited a hundred issues later in "Iron Man" #249-250, sending Doom and Iron Man to meet Arthur again--this time a reborn version in the year 2093!


With the way it draws on classic stories and fairy tales, it shouldn't surprise anyone that Bill Willingham's "Fables" found a way to tie into the story of Arthur. In this case, Arthur himself is absent (having yet to be reborn after his death at Avalon) but his role is carried out by Flycatcher, the Frog Prince, knighted with Excalibur by the Forsworn Knight, Sir Lancelot, before going off to found a new kingdom.

There's enough ideas in there to fill an ongoing series, but aside from a few cameos, Ystin (or Ystina, rather) hasn't been seen much since.

What's more, in his latest run, he was there when the actual sword Excalibur was drawn, this time around by Dr. Faiza Hussain, who promptly set about putting it to good use by ramming it through CA favorite Dracula.

And that is why everyone should be reading "Hellboy."
Network: 


























Comments:
(10)Add a comment
Thursday 19 November
By Troy Freund
Why no mention of "Knights of Pendragon" from Marvel UK? That was a great series!
Reply
Thursday 19 November
By David Uzumeri
I always kind of wanted to check out Matt Wagner's Mage, but you just pretty definitively sold me on it.
Reply
Friday 20 November
By jj
Radical Comics' "Caliber" comes to mind; Arthur & Co. in the Old West. It had some flaws, but the premise was interesting, and the art was pretty.
Reply
Friday 20 November
By ShadowWing Tronix
I remember the Prince Valiant cartoon. I enjoyed it, and that actually got me reading the comic strips, even though the strip has advanced in story time further down the calendar.
Reply
Saturday 21 November
By Zurairi AR
You missed the King Arthur descendant, Rich, from Paul Jenkins' run on Hellblazer!
Reply
Saturday 21 November
By esteban
Hold on: I always thought it was pretty well established that the Beowulf figure in "Mage" was based on Dave Sim. The appearance and attitude were certainly there, as was the fact that at the time Sim DID hire limos when he attended comic cons, challenge basically everyone in the industries that didn't toe his line, and generally tried to act like a arrogant rock star.
And then he became a real jerk.
Reply
Saturday 21 November
By invinciblesuperblog
Could be! I was just going off of what Roberson said on War Rocket Ajax, but he admitted it was just an educated guess.
Monday 23 November
By JM
I think the Dave Sim reference was the Sigfried-inspired character Kevin Matchstick brawled with in Mage II. There was a Beowulf figure as well (wearing a shirt with Wagner's own Grendel's mask as his symbol), but he wasn't prominent in the story and may well have been a sneaky Loeb cameo, as I recall he was balding and bespectacled.
Saturday 21 November
By tommm9
hey don't forget that most of the demon story lines link to king arthur and merlin even the one in whensday comics.
Reply
Monday 23 November
By esteban
Aw nuts, JM is right. I remembered Sim as being the one wearing the Grendel t-shirt and I guess I fused the two characters together. Sorry.
Reply