Last
Plane
from
Rio Lindo
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Cover Date:
July, 1983
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Scripter: Larry Hama |
Penciler: Mike Vosburg
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Inker: Jon
D'Agostino
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Letterer: Joe Rosen |
Colorist: Bob
Sharen
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Editor: Denny O'Neil
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Editor-in-Chief: Jim Shooter
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Summary:
Continuing from "Three Strikes for Snake-Eyes", a Cobra
jet carrying the Baroness and the Cobra operative known as Scar-Face
bombs
a Cobra bunker on a small island in Sierra Gordo. On the island were
Snake-Eyes,
Dr. Venom and Kwinn. It appears the island has been vaporized. Minutes
before, the Cobras bombed a boat carrying Breaker, Gung-Ho and Stalker.
The Joes survived the explosion and are hiding underwater when the
Baroness
circles back to check for survivors. Cobra Commander orders the
Baroness
to return to base with the contents of Scar-Face's briefcase before she
can find the survivors.
The three Joes are walking through the swamp when
Stalker falls into
a sink-hole. Seconds later he appears out from under the water fighting
a crocodile. He is nearly killed before he fatally stabs the animal. He
walks up on shore, but faints from exhaustion and a leg injury. He
wakes
up hours later to find Breaker roasting the crocodile over a campfire
at
an abandoned Cobra research station. Stalker scolds Breaker for
building
a fire, since the smoke can be seen for miles. Gung-Ho had hitched a
ride
in a farm truck full of pigs to the local radio station. Once there, he
pays the truck's drivers with a Marine Corps cigarette lighter for use
of one of their hats and serapes.
At Cobra HQ, Cobra Commander congratulates the Baroness
and Scar-Face
on their successful mission. Baroness confides that she thinks
Scar-Face
wanted the Joes to escape, and that he has other motivations and
loyalties.
The "specialist" (face unseen) appears behind the commander, asking the
Baroness whose loyalties she means.
In Sierra Gordo, Stalker and Breaker reinforce and booby-trap the area
around the burnt-out research station. A group of French mercenaries
sees
the research station and head that way to gain information about Cobra
that can be sold. In Rio Lindo, capitol of Sierra Gordo, Gung-Ho enters
the guarded radio station in disguise, as a local sombrero and
serape-wearing
peasant. He tries to get a message to Staten Island, but when he
insults
the station manager, the man calls his guards to shoot him. Gung-Ho
pulls
out his machine gun and shoots the guards, then beats up the manager.
Back
at G.I. Joe HQ, Hawk gets Gung-Ho's call and puts together a rescue
mission
that includes a new member: a Navy SEAL named Torpedo. The team boards
an Army transport and Scarlett asks Hawk what happened to Snake-Eyes.
Hawk
says he'll brief everyone once the plane is en route to Sierra Gordo.
In
Rio Lindo, Gung-Ho commandeers a taxi by holding the driver at gunpoint
and forcing him to drive to the local air strip.
At Cobra HQ, Cobra Commander tells the Baroness that Scar-Face was
given
a post-hypnotic suggestion to plant clues for the Joes to find about
Cobra's
next operation. The briefcase he was carrying had no importance, after
all. A clue was left in the burnt-out research station for the Joes to
find. The "specialist" reports that a group of mercenaries are heading
toward the station and that they may stop the Joes. He says that he has
already started a plan that will take care of the mercenaries to make
sure
the Joes will find the clue.
At the research station, Stalker is beginning to go into
shock from
his infected leg wound. Breaker discovers a Cobra courier pouch in the
station. Stalker reads it, but knows the message must be fake. He holds
the paper up to the sunlight and discovers a "micro-dot" on the page,
that
may hold secret information. Meanwhile, the Joes' rescue team
parachutes
into the jungle. Gung-Ho takes the cab driver's keys, telling him to
wait
for him. He then steals a bulldozer at a construction site. The
mercenaries
are scouting the research station with binoculars and see two armed men
in a trench there. They then see the Joe paratroopers and decide to
take
the station before the troops get there ahead of them. Doc and Torpedo
land at the river where Torpedo dives underwater to check the site
where
the island was bombed. He finds the bunker still intact. He taps at the
door, but returns to the surface when Doc tugs on his line. They see
the
new group of mercs killing the French group. The new mercs are Cobras
sent
by the "specialist." Back underwater, a tapping sound comes from inside
the bunker, but Torpedo has already gone, and doesn't hear the
response.
The rest of the Joes rescue team led by Scarlett takes
control of the
airfield while fighting off the local militia. Doc and Torpedo arrive
at
the research station the same time Gung-Ho does, driving a bulldozer.
They
find Stalker and Breaker in the water tower, and learn that the men in
the trench are actually dummies set by the two Joes. Doc, Torpedo,
Stalker,
Breaker and Gung-Ho board the bulldozer and head back to the cab.
Taking
the cab, they arrive at the airfield to meet the other Joes, just as
the
transport plane returns to pick them up. The cab is being chased by the
local militia's armored cars. The Joes all board the taxi and pay the
driver
for the car. Since they're uner attack, the plane just touches down
without
stopping. As it rolls down the runway, the Joes are firing on the
militia.
The plane's ramp comes down and the taxi drives inside. The plane takes
off just seconds before getting to the end of the runway.
On the plane back to America, Doc says that Stalker will be fine after
a few weeks of rest. Stalker gives Hawk the sheet of paper and tells
him
about the micro-dot. Hawk hopes it will give them some clue to Cobra's
operation. "It's the least we can do...for Snake-Eyes." Back at the
bottom
of the river in Sierra Gordo, tapping is still coming from inside the
sunken
bunker...
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Commentary: Whew!
As
you can see from the summary "Last Plane
from Rio Lindo" has a lot going on in a fast and complex story. The
issue
begins literally seconds after #12, with the Cobra plane overhead and
Stalker,
Breaker and Gung-Ho floating among the recently bombed wreckage of
their
boat. The story continues from their with lots of action, starting with
Stalker fighting with a crocodile. It might be a little ridiculous,
especially
since Stalker won, but at least he's injured.
On the characterization side of things, Breaker is shown
as being a
little naive when he makes a campfire that can be seen from miles away.
Stalker yells at him, telling him that if he wanted Stalker to keep
warm,
mud would've worked just as well. This fits with Stalker better
knowledge
of the military. (This was one of the scenes that made me say that
Breaker
was naive in my biography of him.) Gung-Ho's solo scenes tend to be
played
for humor. He handles himself very well and always has a sense of
humor.
Even when in disguise, he wisecracks to the radio station manager when
he treats him with a bad attitude. We see more hints at Scarlett and
Snake-Eyes
relationship here. Scarlett asks Hawk if Snake-Eyes is alive in Sierra
Gordo, but he tells her to wait and find out in the briefing on the
plane.
We don't see the briefing, but when the Joes jump, you can see tear on
Scarlett's face. Obviously, Hawk told her he was dead. The Cobras are
still
slowly heading toward scheming against each other. Destro appears
again,
still without a name. We still son't get a clear look at his face, but
we see much more of him in the shadows. In all of his scenes he seems
to
be taking command and sounds more intelligent than Cobra Commander and
the Baroness.
Larry Hama usually isn't afraid to expect his readers to be fairly
intelligent.
Many subtle things happen in the story. For example we aren't told
outright
what Cobra's plans are, but we are allowed to figure it out as the
story
goes on. The story is very fast-paced and cuts quickly from scene to
scene
until everything comes to a head in the final scenes at the airfield.
And
in the most subtle thing of all, we "hear" the tapping at the door of
the
sunken bunker, but we never actually find out that Snake-Eyes, Dr.
Venom
and Kwinn are still alive. They are, but we don't see that until next
issue.
The story ends with that eerie tapping sound that makes for a good
cliffhanger. |
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First Appearances:
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Reprinted
in:
- G.I. JOE Comics
Magazine #5 (August 1987). Digest format from Marvel Comics. Includes issues #12
and #14.
- Tales of G.I. Joe #13 (January 1989). Reprint series from Marvel.
- G.I. JOE: Volume 2 (June 2002). A trade paperback collection from
Marvel. Includes issues #11-20.
- Classic G.I. JOE:
Volume 2
(March 2009). A trade paperback collection from IDW Publishing. Aside
from some slight changes made to the cover, this is a reprint of the
earlier Marvel collection. Includes
issues
#11-20.
- G.I. JOE: Best Worst of Baroness (January 2010).
Part of a series of reprints from IDW. Also includes issues #1, 14, 15,
34
and 47.
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