Code
Name:
Sea Strike!
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Cover Date:
February, 1983
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Script & Art: Herb
Trimpe
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Letterer: Rick Parker
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Colorist: Christie
Scheele |
Editor: Denny O'Neil
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Commander: Jim Shooter
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"We
will dominate the Earth and sky! It will be our first step in ruling
the cosmos itself!"
— Cobra Commander
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Summary:
Somewhere off the coast of Florida, a Cobra SRV (Submersible
Reconnaissance Vessel) carrying a seaplane is searching the seas. Cobra
Commander watches a U.S. space shuttle at the Kennedy Space Center. An
officer reports an approaching aircraft and the commander orders the
vessel
to dive as the SRV disappears beneath the ocean.
Elsewhere, the Joes--led by Stalker--are setting up some
equipment in
a snow storm. The Joes are complaining all the way. Clutch gets sick of
working and throws a snowball at Stalker. Hawk appears without cold
weather
gear telling Clutch that will cost him a hundred dollars out of next
month's
pay. He orders the "blowers" to be shut off and we see the Joes are
actually
training indoors after the "storm" ends. Hawk briefs the Joes that they
are being sent to provide security for a space shuttle that is
launching
to set up a new spy satellite. Rock & Roll complains that it's just
like the army to train them in the snow and send them to Florida.
Meanwhile, a huge Cobra underwater fortress readies for
Cobra Commander's
SRV to enter the port. Later, the commander and the Baroness brief the
other Cobra officers on their mission to set up several sea bases that
will launch their weapons satellites. To prevent the United States from
stopping their plans, Cobra will attack the shuttle and the Kennedy
Space
Center before the spy satellite can be launched. The Joes arrive at the
space center for their briefing. Stalker will be in charge of the
"outer
defense ring" that will be responsible for stopping any Cobra landings
from reaching the shuttle. Grunt, Steeler, Rock & Roll and Grand
Slam
will defend the area with the VAMP, MOBAT tank, the Mobile Missle
Launcher
and the HAL laser cannon. The inner ring will be Hawk, Zap, Short Fuse,
Scarlett and Snake-Eyes. Breaker isn't happy to learn that he and Flash
will be onboard the shuttle for security. "Stock up on the air sick
bags!
Breaker's turning green!"
The next day, Breaker and Flash board the shuttle. On the coast,
Stalker
reports that they are under attack from Cobra S.E.A. legs: walking,
amphibious
vehicles and Cobra tanks. The Joes "advance to the rear" to stall the
attack
after the HAL is destroyed. Further into the swamps the battle begins
between
the Joes and their vehicles and the Cobra assault force. Eventually,
the
Joes have won, but Cobra Commander and the Baroness leave in a Cobra
helicopter
and fire a missle at the defenseless shuttle. Hawk shoots the missle
just
before it hits, and jumps into a blast shelter as it detonates. The
shuttle
launches into orbit, but Cobra Commander is not beaten yet. In the
Joes'
aqua-chopper, the team locates Cobra's sea base and lands on its
surface.
Suddenly a missle launches from the base and towards the shuttle in
orbit.
Breaker and Flash are outside of the shuttle in spacesuits and
jetpacks.
As the missle approaches, Flash gets a crazy idea. As the missle gets
closer,
he accelerates to match its speed and uses his backpack jets to push it
so the missle just barely misses the shuttle, amazing everyone, even
Flash.
Back at the Cobra sea base, the Joes are battling Cobra soldiers. They
eventually defeat them and the Cobras surrender. The commander and the
Baroness escape in the SRV and inform the Joes (over radio) that the
base
will self-destruct shortly. The Joes inflate their survival rafts to
escape,
but the Cobra soldiers refuse and vow to serve Cobra Commander to the
end,
even if it means their deaths. The base explodes, but the Joes spot the
SRV trying to ram the rafts. All the Joes' weapons are soaking wet
except
for Zap's bazooka. He sinks the SRV, but soon after, the Cobra sea
plane
emerges from the water and the commander escapes. The Joes are upset,
but
they all survived the assault. As the rafts drift back to shore, the
team
speculates that their next assignment will be two weeks sea training,
and
then afterward they'll be sent to the Sahara. |
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Commentary:
"Code Name: Sea-Strike!" is the first of a
very few
G.I. Joe comics written by someone other than Larry Hama. In this case
it's Herb Trimpe, the regular G.I. Joe artist. In a few issues he
shares
a writing credit with Hama, but this issue is all his own. The issue is
only the second sice #1 to have a story involving all the team members
all the way through. The story is less military than Hama's style and
seems
to lean more towards science fiction. The Cobra underwater base strikes
me as something more often seen in the cartoon series. The SEA legs,
Cobra's
walking tanks were most likely inspired by the Imperial walkers from
The
Empire Strikes Back. The Cobra invasion is a pretty good battle scene,
as well.
In this issue, Cobra is the most fanatical than it has
ever been, with
Cobra's plans being literally to take over the world, and rather
quickly.
They have not yet been this ambitious. The Cobra soldiers are also a
little
too fanatical, staying loyal even too their deaths. But this early in
the
series, Trimpe didn't know how Cobra would turn out. In the space
scenes,
some laws of physics must have been broken, with Flash pushing the
missle
out of the way of the shuttle, but Breaker's reaction is kind of funny.
He sings Flash a couple bars of "Have I Told You Lately That I Love
You?"
During the battle on the deck of the sea base, we see one of the few
injuries
of the series so far. Instead of the expected "it doesn't hurt"
reaction
when asked how his shoulder wound is, Grand Slam actually says, "You
want
honesty? It hurts real bad!" Since children would've read this book,
it's
good to see that the soldiers aren't superheroes who are invulnerable
to
pain.
Character-wise, the Baroness has more great terrorist
lines like "capitalist
lackeys." In what's probably a reference to the TV series from the
early
'80s, Hill Street Blues, Hawk tells the Joes at the end of the
briefing,
"And hey, one more thing! Be careful out there!" Zap's strange sense of
humor shows up again, when he bets Short Fuze five bucks that he'll
"outscore"
him. Short Fuze isn't amused. Snake-Eyes shows more of his fighting
skills
when he takes out a Cobra tank driver with his bare hands.
In what may be another dialogue glitch, Hawk seems to
refer to Stalker
and "ranger" as two separate people. Also, Hawk mentions that he's been
in uniform for thirty years. That would make him about fifty as of this
issue. It's possible, but that would make him 60 by the end of the
series,
and he tends to be portrayed younger looking as the series goes on.
But,
ages have never been comic books' strong suit. One strange thing is the
end of the story that says "FINIS?" with a question mark, as if
there're
some loose ends, but there really aren't.
So, this was an all right story, but not one of the best of the series
so far. Trimpe writes a little more sci-fi than Larry Hama's more
military
style, but his battle scenes hold up pretty well.
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Reprinted
in:
- G.I. JOE Comics
Magazine #3 (April 1987). Digest format from Marvel Comics.
Includes issues #6
and #7.
- Tales of G.I. Joe #8 (August 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 comic-based action figures of Rock & Roll
and Short
Fuze, and Flash in an
astronaut outfit as seen in the issue.
- 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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