'Tanks'
for
the
Memories...
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Cover Date:
November, 1982
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Scripter: Larry Hama |
Pencils: Don Perlin
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Inks:
Jon D'Agostino and
Mike Esposito
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Letters: Jim Novak
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Colors: Stan Goldberg
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Editor: Tom DeFalco
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Commander: Jim Shooter
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"Yeah,
well,
that's why we're the good guys!"
— General Flagg
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Summary:
On the heavy equipment level of the Pit, Steeler, Breaker
and Clutch are washing the Mobat tank for its appearance in the Armed
Forces
Day parade in New York city. Scarlett can't understand why their
interest
in the tank is more than military. The Joes explain all the tank's
systems
to her. Steeler tells her that General Flagg is planning to drive the
Mobat
past the Joint Chiefs at the parade to prove that the special tank
looks
just like an average tank. Meanwhile, an Army officer boards a plane at
LaGuardia to go to Washington. As he passes the security arch, an X-ray
camera takes a picture of the briefcase and the message inside telling
about the Mobat. The film passes from courier to courier until it
reaches
Cobra headquarters and Cobra Commander, who is in the middle of target
practice using G.I. Joe-team-shaped targets.
At the reviewing stand at the parade, General Flagg is
waiting with
the other generals for the Mobat to pass. On the parade route on Fifth
Avenue, Breaker, Steeler and Clutch are stuck between the "Nautilus at
the North Pole" float and the Springfield Drum and Bugle Corps. While
the
Joes are talking, Clutch mentions that the tank isn't carrying any live
ammo. The parade stops to let crosstown traffic through. The band
unfurls
banners on either side of the tank, as if it's part of the show to make
the tank disappear, but Steeler knows nothing about it. Behind the
Mobat,
the Nautilus float opens up huge steel doors. The Joes realize it's a
trap
to steal the tank and Clutch steps on the gas and the Mobat takes off
down
the street. The Springfield Drum and Bugle Corps takes out their
weapons
and spreads out to trap the tank.
The Mobat gets stuck in traffic as the
band, revealed to be Cobras advances on the tank. With the radio
jammed,
Clutch takes off down the sidewalk to avoid the traffic. Breaker turns
up the Mobat' loudspeaker and tells the pedestrians to clear the
sidewalk
and the tank turns down Madison Avenue. The Mobat hides out in a
construction
site while the Cobras search. Clutch notices that one of the Cobras is
using a back-pack radio to talk to Cobra Commander. With the pack's
short
range, Cobra Commander must be nearby!
Later, the Cobras can't find the
tank, but Cobra Commander's sensors say that the Mobat is right in the
middle of Central Park. The Cobras arrive, but find no tank, until the
Mobat rises out of the pond in the middle of the park. Before the
Cobras
are ready to fire on what they think is a defenseless tank, a loud
"BLAMM!"
comes from the tank. Steeler calls it a warning shot and the Cobras
surrender.
Later on, the Mobat continues on the parade route with the band in
custody
marching in front of the tank. The generals are upset that Flagg
allowed
the tank to be in the parade covered in mud and water.
Suddenly, Clutch
notices sensor activity comong from somewhere and shouts that he knows
where the Cobra command post is. He tells Steeler and Breaker to
"dismount"
and drives the Mobat right towards the reviewing stand. The generals
jump
off the stand as Flagg pulls out his pistol to stop Clutch. The tank
smashes
into the reviewing stand as Flagg jumps clear, his .45 in hand. But
Cobra
soldiers run out from under the stands out of their hidden command
post.
Cobra Commander and the Baroness emerge but before Flagg can fire on
the
commander, he stands in the midst of a girl scout troop with his
pistol,
taunting Flagg that his honor makes him a bad military man. Despite
what
Flagg says, the commander knows he won't fire on him. He escapes,
grazing
Flagg in the head with a shot from his gun. Clutch asks Flagg why he,
the
captain of the Army pistol team, didn't pick off the commander when he
had the chance.
"Yeah, Well," says Flagg, "That's why we're the good guys!"
"Huh?"
"Never mind..."
Back at the Pit, Scarlett dresses Flagg's head wound
while Steeler recounts
what happened. But Flagg can't understand how they fired a warning shot
with no ammo. Clutch tells him that they just cranked up the speakers
as
loud as they went and popped one of Breaker's bubble gum bubbles into
the
microphone, which sounds a lot like a tank firing. Flagg is impressed:
"Son-of-a-gun!"
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Commentary:
"'Tanks' for the Memories..." (another
horrible pun) is
a fun if not somewhat silly story. When the Army courier's message is
"X-ray"ed
the long list of couriers makes it seem that Cobra has hidden spies
everywhere.
We soon find Cobra Commander practicing his shooting on targets that
resemble
Snake-Eyes, Scarlett and Stalker. The most significant part of the
story
is the first mention of "Springfield." That town will later be revealed
as the secret Cobra headquarters. Why did Larry Hama choose the name
"Springfield?"
As one of the generals puts it when Flagg mentions the Drum and Bugle
Corps,
"Springfield? Which one? There must be one Springfield in every state
in
the Union!" More humor comes when Steeler uses the gun sight on full
magnification
to take a closer look at one of the majorettes to, as he says, "keep
abreast
of the rear-guard situation. Some sexist tendencies that would've been
erased in most comics, and not even hinted at in the cartoon. But after
all, they are soldiers. There's also some typical New York
jokes
with angry drivers yelling at Steeler as the tank moves through
traffic.
On the characterization side of things, Flagg's
character is fairly
strong. He's ready to take stop his own man with his pistol but he
wasn't
willing to risk anyone's lives when Cobra Commander taunted him. Also,
we find out he was the head of the Army pistol team. So far, it seems
that
Steeler Breaker and Clutch are some of Hama's favorite "crude army-guy"
characters. Cobra Commander is still his arrogant self as he fires on
Flagg,
shouting "But you are weak, Flagg -- and I am strong!" And Breaker's
annoying
gum-chewing habit turns into a heroic trait, and the bubble trick is
pretty
funny when you think about it. Terrorists beaten by bubble gum! It's
funnier
when the terrorists include drum majors with bazookas.
Now here's the critical section: Not much this time around. It seems
a little unnecessary to have Cobra Commander stand in the middle of a
girl
scout troop. A crowd of people would have sufficed. But I guess only
Cobra
Commander would sink so low. Also, it seems a little unrealistic for
Cobra
Commander to miss Flagg and "graze" him at such close range. Of course,
maybe he just didn't want to shoot a U.S. Army general in the head in
front
of hundreds of witnesses. On the technical side, the Mobat isn't
supposed
to have room for three Joes, at least as far as the toy goes, but
that's
minor. Other than that, the story is a fun, simple story with a little
drama at the end with the portrayal of General Flagg.
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First Appearances:
- Geography: First mention of "Springfield," but
not as Cobra HQ
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Reprinted
in:
- G.I. JOE Comics
Magazine #2 (February 1987). Digest format from Marvel Comics.
Includes issues #3 and #4.
- Tales of G.I. Joe #5 (May 1988). Reprint series from Marvel.
- G.I. JOE: Volume 1 (May 2002). A trade paperback collection from
Marvel. Includes issues #1-10.
- A version of the
issue was released by Hasbro
in 2004, packaged with three action figures, including comic-based action figures of a
Cobra officer,
Steeler
and the original General
Flagg (an earlier figure was released, but that character was said
to be the elder Flagg's son). It included no ads and all
references to Marvel were removed.
- Classic G.I. JOE:
Volume 1
(January 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
#1-10.
- G.I. JOE: Best Worst of Cobra Commander (May
2009). Part of a series of reprints from IDW. Also includes issues #1,
16, 38, 55 and 61.
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