Walls
of Death!
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Cover Date:
January, 1983
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Script: Larry Hama |
Plot & Pencils: Herb Trimpe
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Inks: Chic Stone
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Letters: Jim Novak
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Colors: Christie
Scheele |
Editor: Denny O'Neil
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Editor-in-Chief: Jim Shooter
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"Tovarich.
Friends... for the time being..."
"You're
on, buddy... until we get this plane"
— Brekhov and Stalker
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Summary:
In the mountains of Afghanistan, the G.I. Joe team and
the October Guard have been captured by Cobra Commander and his army,
along
with the Joe RTV carrying the crashed Soviet spylane the soldiers came
to retrieve. The commander, who knows each soldier by name, orders two
Cobras to stay behind and to "prolong the amusement" before executing
the
Joes and the October Guard. The Cobras leave in the RTV ad leave behind
the VAMP jeep. While the Cobras wait, to make the soldiers "sweat a
little,"
Clutch seems to have a plan and the laser cannon on the VAMP begins to
move, aims at the Cobras and fires just before the Cobras fire their
weapons.
Clutch reveals that he had his arms crossed the whole time because he
was
holding the remote control to the cannon. Breaker says that he planted
a locater transmitter on the RTV so that they can follow the Cobras to
their nearby stronghold. Stalker and the October Guard's commander,
Colonel
Brekhov agree on a temporary truce to get the spyplane back, despite
the
protests of Scarlett. The Joes and the Guard get into their vehicles
and
follow the RTV's signal. Hours later, they reach the Iranian border and
have to fight their way past the Iranian border patrol.
Later that night, the two teams reach a hill overlooking
the Cobra stronghold.
Steeler's image intensifier visor shows no entrance to the bunker, just
"smooth, solid unbroken walls." From inside the Cobra stronghold, the
Joes'
are spotted when Stalker gets an overhead view of the bunker in the
JUMP
jet pack. All Stalker sees is a maze-like pattern on the roof.
Suspecting
it to be an alarm system, he and Brekhov send Schrage to the roof with
Steeler and Breaker. The others split up to find an entrance. Stalker,
Scarlett and Flash are about to use the laser to cut a hole in the
bunker
when a door opens up. Stalker figures its a trap, but knows it's their
only way in. On the roof, Breaker and the others notice the pattern
resembles
a "hot-plate" just before Cobra Commander activates the electrical
field
on the roof, knocking them out. Outside Clutch radios Stalker that he's
lost contact with Breaker. He later jokes that Scarlett should've
"powdered
her nose in my mirror..." A Cobra bayonet appears behind Clutch and
inside,
Stalker loses contact with him.
They continue on into the bunker through
dark passageways full of booby traps. They encounter a group of King
Cobra
snakes and Flash uses his protective gear to deflect the snakes' venom.
They blast their way through a steel door leading to the inside of the
bunker, only to find the RTV and the October Guard pointing their
weapons
at them. Brekhov thinks he has won until Cobra Commander appears,
pleased
that he has again used the two teams against each other. Before he can
execute them, a Cobra soldier behind the commander pulls off his helmet
revealing that it's Clutch. He grabs Cobra Commander and holds him at
gunpoint.
Using him as a means to escape. Brekhov says that it is unacceptable
that
the Joes will succeed and when Clutch asks, "What're you gonna do about
it?" he answers, "Eliminate the hostage!" and shoots Cobra Commander.
Clutch
discovers it wasn't the real commander. The Cobras start firing and the
Joes take the RTV and the VAMP, leaving the October Guard behind.
Later,
as the Joes drive off towards Karachi, Clutch and Stalker discuss what
happened in the VAMP. Clutch explains that when he made the joke about
Scarlett and his mirror, he glanced in the mirror on the VAMP, saw the
Cobra and whacked him with the radio. He stole his uniform and walked
right
into the bunker.
Later on, Hawk meets the team at the port of Karachi. Hawk tells
Stalker
they did a job, but now he can now tell them the truth. The real plane
was airlifted out of the mountains earlier. The box they hauled was
filled
with "scrap metal and no-deposit bottles." The team was only a decoy.
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Commentary:
Part Two of the October Guard story is as good
as
the first. The Cobras' arrogance gets them killed before they can
execute
the two teams. The Joes and the Guard decide on a truce, which isn't
really
much of a surprise, but what's interesting is how opposed to the idea
Scarlett
is, saying, "You can't trust these lousy reds." While it may be in
keeping
with the fear of the Soviet Union at the time, it's a little strange to
see Scarlett being so intolerant. In a funny exchange, Stalker tells
them
that to fight is useless, talking only in slang terms. Horrorshow
doesn't
understand but Brekhov "translates" explaining that he has an "affinity
for this particular dialect." Reaching the border of Iran, Breaker
quips,
"What're you gonna do? Promise to give the Shah back." A surprisingly
mature
joke that proves Larry Hama actually reads the newspapers. In one of
the
most violent scenes in the whole series, the Joes and the Soviets start
shooting thier way through the attacking Iranian border patrol, leaving
a trail of bodies behind them. "Well, so much for Iranian-American
relations."
Later on, the Joes use their ingenuity to make it
through Cobra Commander's
booby traps. It's actually a surprise when Clutch pulls off his Cobra
helmet
and grabs the commander. It's also a surprise when Brekhov, willing to
do whatever he can to get the spyplane, "eliminates" the hostage.
Fortunately
(or Unfortunately), the real Cobra Commander is hidden away. Stalker is
nearly as callous a Brekhov when he shoves Daina out of the way when
she
tries to get onto the VAMP to escape. In the "Epilogue," we find out
why
Hawk seemed to be selling out the team to Cobra over the radio in the
previous
issue: the whole mission was a decoy! Hawk doesn't seem to like what he
had to do, either.
One of the interesting things at the beginning is the
fact that Cobra
Commander not only knows the Joes by name, but knows the October Guard
as well. They have apparently fought each other before. The October
Guard's
dialogue is the stereotypical Russian-talk that Americans tend to
expect
from Russians with "da" sprinkled everywhere and phrases like "peace
loving
peoples of Soviet Union." The truce is fairly interesting because
Brekhov
and Stalker are both soldiers first, and know they need to do whatever
they can to succeed. In subsequent appearances, the October Guard may
be
the Joes' enemies, but they never really seem like "the bad guys." In
their
next appearance, four years later in G.I. Joe Yearbook #2, the October
Guard are actually the main characters in the story, with the Joes
having
a minor role. They end up to be one of the most interesting aspects of
the series.
"Walls of Death" is a good conclusion to this two-part story. This is
due to the unexpected depth of the October Guard (a Larry Hama creation
that Hasbro had nothing to do with) and because of the very
unpredictable
story filled with surprises. To top it off, it's full of a sense of
humor
making sure things don't get too serious.
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Reprinted
in:
- G.I. JOE: The Trojan Gambit (1983).
A large-sized comic from Marvel Books. This book reprints a heavily
edited "combined" version of issues #6 and #7,
alongside issue #3. It
features a new painted cover loosely based on the cover of issue #3. (Click here
for YoJoe.com's samples of the edited and merged pages.)
- G.I. JOE Comics
Magazine #3 (April 1987). Digest format from Marvel Comics.
Includes issues #6 and #8.
- Tales of G.I. Joe #7 (July 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 2005, packaged with three action figures, including the first action figures based on Stormavik
and Horrorshow,
and a repainted version of the Stalker
figure released with a reprint of G.I. JOE #3.
- 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
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