The One was an American six-issue comic book limited series published by Epic Comics in 1985–1986. It was written and drawn by Rick Veitch.[1]
The One | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Epic Comics |
Schedule | Bimonthly |
Format | Limited series |
Genre | |
Publication date | July 1985 - May 1986 |
No. of issues | 6 |
Creative team | |
Created by | Rick Veitch |
Written by | Rick Veitch |
Artist(s) | Rick Veitch |
Collected editions | |
The One: The Last Word in Superheroics | ISBN 0-9624864-5-0 |
Overview
editThe One is a fantasy adventure involving monstrous superheroes, the Cold War, and spiritual evolution. An individual of deranged disposition orchestrates a deception, inducing both the United States and the Soviet Union to unleash both their arsenal of nuclear missiles and their superhero operatives against each other. Contrary to expectations of cataclysmic nuclear conflict, this action catalyzes the revelation of the latent cosmic capabilities inherent within humanity.
Analysis
editThe One presaged both Alan Moore/Dave Gibbons' Watchmen (1986-1987) and Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns (1986) in its revisionist approach to superheroics. As Moore would later write:
The One ... is a kind of landmark; a pulling together of obsessions and ingenious storytelling ideas into a coherent whole ... Its revisionist superheroics, while conceived at roughly the same time, predate Watchmen and Dark Knight in terms of publication, as does its packaging. Its political and humanist preoccupations were voiced before such sentiments became chic. Its deranged, culture-conscious humor offers an alternative and an antidote to today's rather gloomy trend of pessimistic, post-modern ultra-humans... Whatever it is that the comic books of the 1980s turn out to be remembered for, The One was right there in the thick of it, carving out a niche in the mainstream for dangerous ideas long before dangerous ideas became box-office certainties.[2]
Publication history
editVeitch's own King Hell Press reprinted the series in two trade paperbacks:
- The One (Dec 1989)
- The One: The Last Word in Superheroics (192 pages, November 2003, ISBN 0-9624864-5-0)
In 2018, IDW Publishing reprinted the whole series over a period of six months.[3]
Further reading
edit- "Veitch Speaks: From Swamp to Sewer". Amazing Heroes. No. 171. Interviewed by Darwin McPerson. Sep 1989. pp. 24–27.
References
edit- ^ "About Rick". Rick Veitch. Retrieved 2023-08-13.
- ^ Moore, Alan (Dec 1989). "Introduction". The One: The Last Word in Superheroics (first ed.). King Hell Press.
- ^ Spinney, Alan (February 28, 2018). "Comic Review: Rick Veitch's The One #1 (IDW)". Fanboy Factor.
External links
edit- The One at the Grand Comics Database
- The One at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Paradias, Konstantine (Aug 2012). "What I Think About Stuff-The One by Rick Veitch". Shapescapes.
- Davison, Joshua (3 Mar 2018). "The One #1 Review: A Blast from the Past That's Still Very Relevant". Bleeding Cool.
- "1985: The One". Totally Epic: A Totally Ill-Advised Re-Reading Of Everything Published By Epic Comics. December 24, 2019.
- Lukens, Jonathan (March 10, 2020). "The Bomb That Will Bring Us Together: Rick Veitch's 'The One'". We Are the Mutants.
- Cederlund, Scott (May 24, 2023). "Rick Veitch's The One: A Cold War Comic Reflecting Today's Superhero Culture and Humanity's Struggle for Unity". From Cover to Cover.