The "Evil" Astro: NOW! Comics for a new generation
Posted: Mon Jul 02, 2012 8:18 pm
A lot of the longtime members of this forum already know this story, but in light of the influx of new members, I feel it'd be good to reintroduce it. I'm talking about the time Astro got an American comic book in the eighties.
I first found out about it through thumbnails on a website by former forum user Dr. Frag, back in 8th grade, but much to my disgust there wasn't any information elsewhere online. By the time I was in 12th grade I'd completed a series of reviews (warnings for profanity within) and put the whole 20-issue run online, and completely dug up the whole story behind the series. It's as follows...
In 1987, there once was a comic studio called NOW! Comics that was working on comics based on Speed Racer, Green Hornet, ALF and...ugh...Married With Children. Company owner and arch-devil Tony Caputo was interested in making something based on Astro Boy, which at the time was in legal turmoil since the closing of Mushi Productions. A man only known as Mr. Sezuki, presumed the English licencor of the 1960's anime, sold Caputo the rights to make an Astro Boy comic, and Osamu Tezuka had no idea this was going on. Caputo was going to hire diehard Astro fan Brian Thomas to do art...
...but contracted cover artist Ken Steacy offered to do full art and be paid in Canadian dollars, which were vastly cheaper to American dollars in the late eighties. Guess which one Caputo hired.
Cheap or not, Steacy didn't care about Astro, and his art ranged from "going through the motions" to "doodles on a napkin slathered in airbrush paint". It got worse and worse until the original writer quit, then sales dropped dramatically, and Steacy quit. He wrote a scene that killed off Astro in the end of one issue, leaving the now-hired Brian Thomas to have to draw Astro exploding to death and then somehow have him back to normal by the next installment. Sales increased with Brian's improved direction, but when distribution widened, the series wasn't quite selling enough and it was discontinued in 1989.
The series is, for the most part, a clustered mess that's acid on the eyes. Astro is moody and violent, at one point hinting about making a bloodbath of his human oppressors and shooting at cops' feet with his finger laser...the worst thing he does is STICK HIS WHOLE HAND IN AN INJURED SOLDIER'S WOUND AND FEEL AROUND and it's supposed to be the moment when he realizes humans and robots are different. Dr. Tenma is psychotic and, at one point, tortures Astro by putting a robot spider capable of electric shocks inside Astro's chest cabinet. Hamegg is a canned Italian stereotype and his creeper attitude to Astro is super unsettling. Duke Red appears as a snivelling, bribed underling for a butch general. And Steacy's art is all like:
It's a shame, since he actually makes some really good art when Caputo's not making him draw little boys at gunpoint. I made it my goal when I was 14 years old to find out what was going on with this series, and now, I am the expert on this awful, awful thing. I'd like to thank Tawashi Bus Hat and Brian Thomas himself for the support. (Brian also advised me not to contact Caputo, proving Caputo is the devil.)
Basic name conversion list, for the most part taken from the 1963 dub:
Tobio Tenma: Astor Boynton
Dr. Tenma: Dr. Boynton (and his mysteriously dead wife, Jean)
Hamegg: Mr. Cacciatore
Duke Red: Tas Tamil (his kids look exactly like him)
Astro's Parents: Rebecca and Elmer
Dr. Fooler: I.Q. Plenty (guest-starring an awful talking dog named Spud)
Uran: Astro Girl
You got questions, or want more pictures? I'll give you all you want! Let's gab!
I first found out about it through thumbnails on a website by former forum user Dr. Frag, back in 8th grade, but much to my disgust there wasn't any information elsewhere online. By the time I was in 12th grade I'd completed a series of reviews (warnings for profanity within) and put the whole 20-issue run online, and completely dug up the whole story behind the series. It's as follows...

In 1987, there once was a comic studio called NOW! Comics that was working on comics based on Speed Racer, Green Hornet, ALF and...ugh...Married With Children. Company owner and arch-devil Tony Caputo was interested in making something based on Astro Boy, which at the time was in legal turmoil since the closing of Mushi Productions. A man only known as Mr. Sezuki, presumed the English licencor of the 1960's anime, sold Caputo the rights to make an Astro Boy comic, and Osamu Tezuka had no idea this was going on. Caputo was going to hire diehard Astro fan Brian Thomas to do art...

...but contracted cover artist Ken Steacy offered to do full art and be paid in Canadian dollars, which were vastly cheaper to American dollars in the late eighties. Guess which one Caputo hired.

Cheap or not, Steacy didn't care about Astro, and his art ranged from "going through the motions" to "doodles on a napkin slathered in airbrush paint". It got worse and worse until the original writer quit, then sales dropped dramatically, and Steacy quit. He wrote a scene that killed off Astro in the end of one issue, leaving the now-hired Brian Thomas to have to draw Astro exploding to death and then somehow have him back to normal by the next installment. Sales increased with Brian's improved direction, but when distribution widened, the series wasn't quite selling enough and it was discontinued in 1989.
The series is, for the most part, a clustered mess that's acid on the eyes. Astro is moody and violent, at one point hinting about making a bloodbath of his human oppressors and shooting at cops' feet with his finger laser...the worst thing he does is STICK HIS WHOLE HAND IN AN INJURED SOLDIER'S WOUND AND FEEL AROUND and it's supposed to be the moment when he realizes humans and robots are different. Dr. Tenma is psychotic and, at one point, tortures Astro by putting a robot spider capable of electric shocks inside Astro's chest cabinet. Hamegg is a canned Italian stereotype and his creeper attitude to Astro is super unsettling. Duke Red appears as a snivelling, bribed underling for a butch general. And Steacy's art is all like:

It's a shame, since he actually makes some really good art when Caputo's not making him draw little boys at gunpoint. I made it my goal when I was 14 years old to find out what was going on with this series, and now, I am the expert on this awful, awful thing. I'd like to thank Tawashi Bus Hat and Brian Thomas himself for the support. (Brian also advised me not to contact Caputo, proving Caputo is the devil.)
Basic name conversion list, for the most part taken from the 1963 dub:
Tobio Tenma: Astor Boynton
Dr. Tenma: Dr. Boynton (and his mysteriously dead wife, Jean)
Hamegg: Mr. Cacciatore
Duke Red: Tas Tamil (his kids look exactly like him)
Astro's Parents: Rebecca and Elmer
Dr. Fooler: I.Q. Plenty (guest-starring an awful talking dog named Spud)
Uran: Astro Girl
You got questions, or want more pictures? I'll give you all you want! Let's gab!