Starblazer: From the Command Deck
Former Starblazer editor Bill McLoughlin recalls the making and undoing of a much-loved SF comic published by DC Thomson...
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Starblazer Links
downthetubes features
• Starblazer:
From the Command Deck
First Published 20 July 2009
Last Updated: 20 July 2009
Starblazer editor Bill McLoughlin reveals the
history of the title...
• Blazing through
the Secrecy
First published 16 May 2006
Last updated 20 July 2009
• Starblazer: Behind
the Lines
Ray Aspden reveals his role in the making of DC Thomson's Starblazer
• Starblazer editor
Bill McLoughlin Interview
Starblazer
Issue Checklist
• #1 - 75
• #76 - 150
• #151 - 200
• #201 - 250
• #251 - 281
• Foreign Editions
• Grant Morrison's Starblazer work
• Writer Mike Chinn recalls his days on Starblazer
• Vic Whittle's Starblazer Page
• Starblazer
Memories
Steve Holland is amazed at how many
people remember Starblazer. "It's
now over fifteen years since the last issue appeared but the Starblazer
pocket books appeared regular as clockwork throughout the 1980s at
the rate of two new titles a month so I guess over the nearly twelve
years it appeared a vast army of young science fiction fans, high on Star Wars or Battlestar Galactica, sought
them out.
• Part
1 • Part
2 • Part 3
• In
Review: Starblazer RPG Game
In 2009 Starblazer was revived...
as a Role Playing Game from Cubicle 7. Read our review...
NEW BRITISH COMICS COLLECTIONS AVAIALBLE NOW... This is the first Dan Dare collection I've edited for Titan Books, comprising work by Frank Hampson, Frank Bellamy and Don Harley.
Superb World War 1 strip first published in Battle and another collection edited by me for Titan
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Starblazer: From the Command Deck
Former Starblazer editor Bill McLoughlin recalls the making and undoing of a much-loved SF comic published by DC Thomson...
Starblazer appeared in April 1979 with the trigger being the success of the first Star Wars film although the idea had been conceived some three years earlier with work on a science fiction magazine being done independently by two departments within the DC Thomson empire. Ian Chisholm, when editor of Sparky, had put forward the idea of producing a science fiction based magazine and material was produced for this. It comprised tales of a supernatural nature, along with a streak of horror. At the same time, Jack Smith in the women’s magazine department and a science fiction aficianado, had the idea of producing pocket sized SF tales.
At some stage, Ian and Jack got together and the idea was put forward.
In September 1978 the go ahead was given to publish the comic and authors and artists sought out. The response to adverts was immense and finally we settled on a coterie we knew we could rely on: Ray Aspden, Mel Chappell, Rob Carter, John Speer, Mike Knowles and Jon Radford to name but a few. These stalwarts were ably supported by Alan Rogers and Grant Morrison, who both scripted and drew their own stories.
We also needed artists and the various agents we worked with were given the remit and the selection they came up with was stellar. Alcatena, Ortiz, Carrasco, Sarompas, Pino, Ferrer, Montero, Saichann. Over the years some of the stalwarts of the British scene were persuaded to draw for us... Mike McMahon, Cam Kennedy, Tony O’Donnell, Alan Burrows and Keith Robson, plus many others who wanted to contribute.
The first stories were space opera along very traditional lines. 2000AD was the only SF magazine on the market at the time and their success undoubtedly helped Starblazer. A number of authors and artists wrote and drew for both publications and it was them who got us up and running.
However, as time passed, the Starblazer stories left behind space opera and became more sophisticated, darker and altogether more graphic novel than pocketbook. No genre was left untried and Mike Chinn was the first author to venture into the world of fantasy, his Michael Moorcroftish stories were illustrated by the Argentinian genius, Alcatena.
Alcatena was an absolute delight to work with, creating his own fantastic worlds and characters from the scripts. You didn’t need detail galore for Alcatena because he developed the story in directions you had never dreamed of... he was one of the few artists we didn’t mind adapting storylines because his interpretation was simply genius. Mike also ventured in the world of comedy with the Robot Kid series.
It would be an injustice not to mention some of the other authors and artists
who worked their magic on some very basic ideas. Among the authors were Dave
Taylor, Mark Gorton, Bill Reed, Tony Stent, Gary Rice, Stafford Neeld, Ted
Cowan, Alan Hemus, John Smith, Dave Motton, Paul Alexander (my apologies to
any that have been omitted). Artists were Casanovas Junior, who had a number
of differing styles, Garijo, he of the Robot Kid artwork, Colin McNeill and
Ian Kennedy - who painted some of the best covers seen in Starblazer - Ron
Brown, Keith Robson... and Keith Page also made a huge contribution plus the
many others who made Starblazer what it was.
But Starblazer was doomed. The day of the graphic novel was dawning and the pocketbook format was old hat. Although the tales were very much of the same genre, it was the unappealing format which eventually sealed the end.
In fact, when Starblazer was consigned to the great Black Hole, there were five stories in the pipeline along with four stories under the Legends banner. These were scripted by Alan Hemus, who wrote some of the best text stories to appear in the pages of DC Thomson's publications, and were illustrated by Alcatena, but have never seen the light of day.
They, too, remain in limbo ready to be dusted off and launched on an unsuspecting public when the word is given...