Showing posts with label Hawk and Dove. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hawk and Dove. Show all posts

Hawk & Dove #5, "Death Has Taken My Hand!"

THE HAWK AND THE DOVE #5; April-May 1969; DC Comics (National Periodical Publications); Dick Giordano, editor; featuring the Hawk and Dove in a tale with the long-winded title, "Walk With Me O' Brother... Death Has Taken My Hand!"  The story is written, penciled and inked by lengendary artist Gil Kane.  The cover, also by Kane, spotlights the Dove as only the hand of the fallen Hawk is visible.  A tearful yet determined Dove, kneeling to hold his brother's hand, addresses an unseen foe; "YOU SHOT THE HAWK!  You think I'm a COWARD... that I WON'T fight... well, Buster, you're about to find out how wrong you are...NOW!"



Review by Bill Henley.  The Hawk and the Dove, an attempt at late 60's comics "relevance" created by Steve Ditko, involved a pair of teenage brothers, Hank and Don Hall, with opposed temperaments and philosophies.  Hank was aggressive and prone to try to solve problems with his fists, while Don was a pacifist who tried to avoid violence at all costs.  When a "mysterious voice" turned the brothers into costumed superheroes, the Hawk battled baddies with unrestrained violence while the Dove tried rather awkwardly to stop crimes without violence.  By all accounts, the early issues by Ditko and scriptwriter Steve Skeates were marked by something of a hawk/dove dichotomy between the creators, as Ditko decidedly leaned toward "hawkishness" and (at least according to Skeates' interviews) undermined attempts to show that the Dove could be heroic in his own way.  However, Ditko fell ill and left the series after three issues (SHOWCASE #75 and H & D #1 and 2) and Gil Kane came on board, working with Skeates on #3-4 and taking over the scripting chores himself with this issue.  As we shall see, Kane was more sympathetic to the Dove's viewpoint, and, indeed, his issues tended to lean the other way, making the Dove the real hero and the Hawk a hotheaded foil.


As the story opens, a ruthless masked gunman commits a robbery, shoots down a policeman or guard (not clear which) and then, to top it off, runs down a child with his car while making his getaway.  But fortunately for the cause of justice, an arrest is quickly made in the case, and a newspaper headline announces that police have two witnesses to prove the guilt of the suspect, who unmasked is a rather meek and mild looking fellow named Sam Hodgins.  Or is the cause of justice really being served?  Judge Hall, the father of our young heroes Hank and Don-- portrayed in previous issues as a hard-nosed jurist with a Ditkoesque view of an absolute separation between good and evil-- isn't so sure.  He is shocked to find Sam Hodgins appearing for arraignment in his courtroom, as Hodgins is an old friend of his who once saved his life.  As a friend of the accused, Judge Hall can't preside at his trial, but he promises to do whatever he can to help his old friend prove his innocence.  Returning from a crimefighting foray as Hawk and Dove, followed by the usual arguments (Dove: "You did it again, Brother!  You HAD to beat on those hoods we lucked on... we could have taken them without violence, but you'e always looking for an excuse to bash someone's skull!"  Hawk: "Aaaah!  You give me a pain, you lily-livered, do-gooder creep!")  Reverting to their normal identities as Hank and Don Hall, the brothers find their father-- much admired by both of them-- brooding over the situation with Hodgins.  Both boys want to help their father and decide to use their Hawk and Dove abilities (both of them are stronger and more skilled in their magical hero identities than as themselves) to help clear Hodgins' name.  They figure that if they are in fact able to assume their Hawk and Dove identities by saying the names, that will in itself help prove Hodgins' innocence, since the Hawk and Dove power only works "when injustice is present!" 

The transformation does indeed take place, accompanied by "undulating waves of force," and Hawk and Dove set out for the city's warehouse district in pursuit of the two witnesses against Hodgins, named Johnny Randall and Stan McGuire.  Hawk figures the "sleazy neighborhood" where these men are to be found is a point against them in itself, but Dove chides him for his prejudice.  But when the two men are located, they do indeed look like typical DC thugs-- nattily dressed, but grim-faced and nervous and one with a pencil-thin mustache.  As they move along the streets, Hawk and Dove follow them along the rooftops until they meet with some other shady-looking types-- and, eavesdropping on their conversation, our heroes confirm that the two witnesses are part of a "hot car" stealing ring laying its plans for more thefts!

As Part II of the story opens, the Dove suggests following the gang some more to catch them in the criminal act, but Hawk is having none of that; "Nuts!  You know me better than that!  If violence upsets you, then STAY BACK!"  Dove indeed hangs back as Hawk crashes through a window and lays a punch on one of the thugs.  (Gil Kane shows his flair for wild physical action and exaggerated positions, very much in the Ditko and Jack Kirby mode.  From a standpoint of visual style he was a good choice to follow up Ditko on this strip.)  As a baffled crook shouts, "THERE'S ANOTHER ONE OUT THERE!", Hawk replies, "I'm the HAWK!  And if you want to know who HE is-- GO ON OUT AND ASK HIM!"  As the Hawk beats on Randall, demanding to know why he is lying about Sam Hodgins, Dove grabs McGuire's gun before he can shoot Hawk in the back, and ducks as McGuire tries to punch him and instead punches the wall.  As McGuire gives out with some comic-book-style cussing, (symbolized by random punctuation marks) Dove rebukes him; "Here now!  I know it hurts but your friends are impressionable!"  Though Hawk beats Randall nearly unconscious, the crook insists that he told the truth about Hodgins being the robber they are really hunting.  Dove pulls Hawk off of the dazed, babbling Randall, but then the two brothers play a round of "good cop, bad cop" with McGuire.  As the thug cowers and begs Dove to keep the near-berserk Hawk off him, Dove counsels him; "I'll try to restrain him, sir... though as you see, he's in a rather unreasonable mood!  I'm sure you understand that it's vastly to your advantage to cooperate with us... don't you think!"  The smirk on Dove's face suggests that, despite all his high-minded objections to Hawk's violence, he's not above making use of that violence on occasion.  But even under threat of mauling and mayhem, McGuire too insists, "He... he DONE it, I tell ya!   We seen him... runnin' outa the bank... his mask fell off... the cops pulled us in as witnesses... He DONE it!  I SWEAR it!"  (Despite their criminal activities, these guys perhaps deserve some credit for strength of character in sticking to their story rather than telling Hawk and Dove what they want to hear.)  Hawk finally agrees to let McGuire go unharmed, and Dove explains he's not just being typically soft-hearted; if McGuire really is carrying out a frame, they may still find evidence of it by following him.  "He may not think he's completely safe, but if you beat him up any more, he'll be afraid to even move!"  As the brothers resume their chase across the rooftops, trying to keep the fleeing McGuire in sight, they also resume their endlessly running argument; "Doggonit, why do you always have to be so logical?  Can't you ever just let yourself go?  Give into your emotions?"  Dove replies that he's a big Star Trek fan and Mr. Spock is his idol... no, he doesn't really say that, just, "I'm not even going to bother answering that... Keep an eye on him!  There he goes!"  Hawk complains that trying to follow somebody while climbing up and down rooftops is difficult, and indeed McGuire dashes into an alley and disappears.  "I KNEW I shouldn't have let you talk me into letting him go!  I KNEW I should have dropped down and bashed him!"  "Oh, shut up!  You're going to attract neighbors!  Let's keep looking..."  Dove suggests that they split up with Hawk returning to the gang hideout and Dove checking out McGuire's home address; "I doubt if they'll go to either, but--"  "Another dumb Dove plan!  But I guess it's the only one we've got!"  "For Pete's sake!  You haven't offered a single suggestion since we started, except to crumple noses!"  Their bickering is interrupted by the sound of gunshots!  A ticket-taker has been shot in the course of a theater robbery, and a screeching car flees the scene!  Hawk insists on pursuing the car, which he suspects is driven by McGuire, though Dove is concerned about the condition of the man who was shot.  As the car comes to a stop by a waterfront warehouse, Hawk urges, "Time for us to move in!"

The story pauses for ads and installment #5 of "Fact File," a text feature written (I think) by fan turned DC employee Mark Hanerfeld and spotlighting lesser-known DC heroes of the past.  This one focuses on Wildcat, retelling the origin of the boxer-hero and describing his crimefighting exploits as a backup feature in the 1940's SENSATION COMICS (whose lead feature was Wonder Woman).  Mark commented, "Wildcat is an example of a form of comic strip popular during the Golden Age but all but extinct nowadays.  Because the average comic book of that Age contained a greater number of pages, there was space in the magazines to develop secondary featues and characters (who) were not intended to be stars of their own comic magazines (but) ... added a certain variety to the magazine.  Many fans tend to remember these 'back features' more vividly and with more affection than the big 'stars' of the era.  There was a sort of 'underdog' quality to these secondary strips that made you root for them to do well."

In Part iII of "Death Has Taken My Hand!", the robber in the car, whose face is not clearly shown to the reader, sees Hawk and Dove lurking in his rear-view mirror, so he is aware of their presence as he leaves his car!  (Thought balloon) "Dumb birds think I didn't see you,  eh?  Come on in... I'll be ready and waiting!"  Not knowing their quarry is on to them, Hawk and Dove indulge in their usual argument about tactics; Hawk wants to "go on in and bash him", but Dove insists, "You MORON!  Can't you get it in your head that YOU HAVE NOT GOT THE RIGHT to 'go in and bash' anybody? You're not a law unto yourself!"  Hawk complains but reluctantly agrees to confront the suspect "calmly" and question him. 

But as the two costumed teens enter the warehouse where their quarry is hiding, a large, heavy crate is pushed and falls from above on to the Hawk!  (If you recall, the cover dialogue by Dove refers to Hawk being shot.  But here, he is hit with a heavy object, not shot.  I wonder if the Comics Code raised some objection to one of the heroes being shot, and if Giordano and Kane changed the scene in the interior story but forgot to change the cover line?)  And now, the Dove, who loves his brother no matter how much they bicker and disagree, finally "gives in to his emotions".  After weeping over the inert body of his brother, Dove rises and addresses the mystery man who has attacked him; "KILLER!  ROTTEN KILLER!  WHERE ARE YOU?  IT DOESN'T MATTER WHERE YOU HIDE!  I'M GONNA FIND YOU ANYWAY!"  The next page juxtaposes a central figure of the enraged Dove with scenes of his fleeing, increasingly panicked foe.  "KILLER! I SEE YOU! I'M COMING UP AFTER YOU!  YOU HAVEN'T GOT A CHANCE, KILLER!  YOU LOOK SCARED, KILLER!  WHAT'RE YOU SCARED OF?"

And at last, the cornered "killer" turns to face his avenging foe... who is further shocked to see that he is, after all, Sam Hodgins, the man the Judge so hoped was innocent.  But this does not stop the Dove from laying into Hodgins in a violent rampage that almost makes the Hawk's assaults look restrained.  Finally, "his wrath and fury spent,", the Dove backs away from the unconscious Hodgins, appalled by his own behavior.  Realizing finally that his brother may still be alive after all, the Dove rushes back to summon medical aid and notify the police about Hodgins.  As he does so, he automatically reverts to his non-powered Don Hall identity, as with the defeat of Hodgins"injustice" is no longer present. (It was an interesting side feature of the Hawk and Dove strip that, unlike most double identity heroes, they themselves didn't have complete control over when they changed back and forth.)   As Hank Hall (who has also reverted to normal) is taken to the hospital, Don concocts a lame story about how the two boys were climbing around in an old abandoned house and a staircase came down on Hank.  Apparently the judge and Mrs. Hall are too worried to question Don much, and for some time the family waits tensely to hear the doctors' verdict (Don sits and stares out a window outside which rain is dripping; somehow scenes like this never take place on bright sunny days).  Finally they get the answer; despite a bad concussion, Hank will recover with "no permanent damage". (The family celebrates, and apparently the Judge is relieved eough by his son's survival that he's not too bothered by the fact that his old buddy Hodgins was guilty after all.)    "He's a strong lad!  We couldn't have saved him if he himself hadn't fought so hard."  

Several days later, Don has the chance to see Hank privately in the hospital room, and Hank starts out berating Don for insisting on a cautious approach that gave Hodgins the chance to attack.  But when Don sobbingly confesses his own guilt for endangering his brother and then betraying his ideals with the violent assault on Hodgins, Hank has a change of heart and for once is the reasonable and understanding one.  "Don... I'm sorry for ranting at you...look, you're not wrong, any more than I am... you just did what's human, that's all... it doesn't negate your philosophy.  Anyone would have snapped!  Besides you also SAVED my life, after all... We've still got a lot to learn, right?  So let's shake hands and be friendly enemies again!  Is it a deal, Creampuff?"  And a consoled Don agrees, "It's a deal, Neanderthal!"

That's "The End" of the story, but a 2/3 page "The End Plus Two Weeks" coda, which appears to have been hastily drawn by Kane, shows Hawk (who has apparently made a very quick and complete recovery) and Dove chasing another mysterious figure.  This time it is Dove who leads the pair in crashing through a window in hot pursuit.  Their sudden appearance puzzles another group of youthful crimefighters; "WHA-- WHO?  Who the devil are THEY?"  Caption: "Hey-- isn't that the TEEN TITANS?  You bet your sweet bippy it is!  And they're on a collision course with THE HAWK AND THE DOVE in TEEN TITANS ##21 on sale March 18th!"

The guest apperance in TITANS was evidently an attempt to bolster Hawk and Dove with some extra exposure.  Did it work?  Well, HAWK & DOVE #6, also written and pencilled by Gil Kane, sent Hawk and Dove in pursuit of a mystery villain who has kidnapped their father-. They manage to track him down (thanks mainly to the Dove's budding investigative skills) and discover he is the son of a man whom the Judge once sentenced to prison and who died there.  He wants the Judge to suffer a similar fate.  The Hawk and Dove rescue their father, but the young "vigilantes" get no credit from the Judge (though he appears to have no idea who the Hawk and Dove really are).  Having seemingly pulled back from his hard-line Ditko attitude, the Judge figures that his kidnapper was mentally unbalanced and pitiable, and that he (the Judge) could have talked his way out of the situation without violence.  Downcast by this unwitting rejection by their father, the boys question the value of continuing their costumed careers.  Hank: "Maybe the whole idea of the Hawk and the Dove was a BIG MISTAKE!  Maybe we ought to GIVE THE WHOLE THING UP..."  Don: "Yeah, maybe you're right..."  Final caption: "Is this the END of the Hawk and the Dove??"  Apparently this was an oblique way of announcing that it was the end, if not of the Hawk and Dove themselves, at least of THE HAWK AND THE DOVE comic book.  H & D was one more of the late 60's experimental DC titles which were abruptly cancelled, after just over a year of publication, due to disappointing early sales figures.  The Hawk and Dove didn't actually quit, but after a few more appearances with the Teen Titans, they disappeared into limbo for several years.  Then BRAVE & BOLD #181 in 1982 featured a charming though off-continuity tale by Alan Brennert and Jim Aparo (I ought to review it at full length sometime, though it falls beyond the Silver Age) in which Batman encounters a Hawk and Dove who have grown to adulthood but have not resolved their philosophical differences or learned to use their super-powers to best advantage.  At the end, the "Voice" which gave Hawk and Dove their powers and identities (and which explains that, contrary to their suspicions, it is not God) withdraws the powers, though it may return them one day, "when you have truly learned what it means to be brothers!"  Better perhaps that the Hawk and Dove saga had really ended there. But instead a still-teenage Dove was killed off in CRISIS, and Hawk went on to a new series teamed up with a new female Dove.  That series lasted a year or two longer than the original (I didn't read most of them) but Hawk finally was tapped to become the villain Monarch in the ARMAGEDDON mini-series when a previous choice for the villain's identity fell through.  Hawk may have been a butt-head, and Dove a wimp, but they both deserved better fates than they received.

Brave and the Bold #181 (Batman & Hawk & Dove)


BRAVE AND THE BOLD #181; Dec. 1981; DC Comics; Dick Giordano, editor; featuring Batman and the Hawk and the Dove in "Time, See What's Become of Me...", written by Alan Brennert and drawn by Jim Aparo.  On the cover by Aparo, a giant symbolic figure of Batman watches as the Hawk and Dove wrestle with each other.  Cover caption: "Two brothers gifted with remarkable powers in a time past.  ONE AN AGGRESSOR... ONE A PACIFIST!"


Review by Bill Henley (not much of an aggressor, but not a pacifist either)

I've mentioned this story and talked about doing a review of it before, and here it is.  It's not chronologically a Silver Age story, but it makes a nice coda to the original HAWK & DOVE series, which did qualify as "late Silver Age".  It's one of a small but memorable handful of BRAVE & BOLD team-ups scripted by Alan Brennert, who dabbled in comics as well as television writing before becoming a novelist.

The story begins with an "all-too-rare social visit" between three friends-- Bruce Wayne, Hal Jordan and Barry Allen, all in their civilian identities.  When Bruce insists that he needs to cut the visit short in order to take care of business as his alter ego, Barry complains, "Seems like the only time we get together any more is to stop Throgg the Omnipotent from taking over the world!"  This was back when Batman/Bruce Wayne was somewhat less obsessive and capable of having friendships and a social life as Bruce, even if they always took a back seat to his Batman duties.  Bruce departs with a wave and, "Give my regards to Throgg, guys...!"   The more laid-back Barry and Hal prepare to race each other back to Los Angeles (and out of the story; this isn't a Batman/Flash/GL team-up). 

"Within minutes, Bruce Wayne has shed his evening clothes and is giving new meaning to the phrase 'swinging playboy'"... literally swinging from rooftops, as Batman, on his way to stake out a drug deal.  It seems that mob boss Thomas Kurland has  "handed the local heroin trade over to his son... on the job training, as it were".  Bats plans to watch the younger Kurland make a rendezvous with a drug client, and then follow him to his father.  But another costumed character is also taking an interest...

The Hawk is lurking on a rooftop nearby, after having gotten info on the impending drug deal by "working over a pigeon". Even though despite his super-powers he has to cope with a fear of heights (a detail from the original Hawk & Dove series), he is determined to stop the drug buy from taking place, in his own, shall we say, forthright fashion.  Thinking to himself, "Gotta face my FEARS, like DAD always said..." he leaps down and lays into young Kurland and his henchman-- much to the dismay of Batman, who had other plans.  "THE HAWK? Haven't seen him in years!  What's he doing here, fouling up my stakeout?"  (An editor's note indicates the Hawk's last appearance was back in TEEN TITANS #25.  Though didn't the Hawk and Dove appear briefly as part of "Titans West" in the short-lived 1976-77 TITANS revival?)  Hawk doesn't want Batman interfering with his action either; "I'm not the KID you and your JLA buddies used to patronize any more!  I can handle this MYSELF!"  Maybe not, Hawk... Batman prevents one of the thugs from shooting him, and then young Kurland climbs onto a roof edge in order to get a better vantage point to fight back against the Hawk.  (Kurland's thought balloon; "The guy's a LOON!"  Wrong bird, guy, though I can see your point.)  But in trying to kick the Hawk, Kurland overbalances, and neither Batman nor Hawk can grab him before he falls to his death!

Caption, partly echoing the cover copy; "They were products of their TIME-- the 1960's  Two brothers-- one the aggressor, one the pacifist-- gifted with remarkable powers.  Twelve years later, Kennedy, King and Lennon are gone, and the '60s exist only as a merchandising tool, a NOSTALGIA ITEM for those too young to REMEMBER... and like so many of their generation, the Hawk and the Dove must ask: TIME, SEE WHAT'S BECOME OF ME...?"   (Yes, the line is from Paul Simon, not Lennon.  And yes, in this story twelve years of "real time" have passed since the original 1968-69 HAWK & DOVE comic-book series, and, as we'll see, Hank (Hawk) Hall and his brother Don (Dove) have aged from teenagers into adults.  As some fans complained when the story appeared, this makes the story off-continuity, since other teen characters such as Robin and the other Titans had not aged that much since appearing in the comics of 1969.  But I didn't and don't care.  Ignoring continuity was an old tradition for BRAVE & BOLD, and Alan Brennert did so here to better effect than most of Bob Haney's "Earth-B" off-continuity yarns.)

While an angry Batman accuses Hawk of causing Kurland's death, Hawk finds himself involuntarily changing back to his non-powered civilian identity of Hank Hall!  (As the original H & D series established, the brothers did not have complete control of their identity changes; they could change by saying their hero names only when "injustice was present", and they changed back automatically once the "injustice" was no longer present, even if it was an inconvenient moment for them and their secret identities.)  Hank catches Batman off-guard with a kick and flees.  And now Batman is fearful for the Hawk's life, for if the vengeful Kurland Sr. finds out who he is, from a henchman on the scene who also fled, "his life won't be worth a pound of GRANOLA!"  And Batman is also concerned about the Hawk's state of mind; "He was always HEADSTRONG... AGGRESSIVE... but tonight he seemed on the verge of a BREAKDOWN!"  Batman must find the Hawk and protect him from Kurland-- and perhaps from himself-- until he can put the senior ganglord behind bars!  "Except I don't know the Hawk's true identity... and didn't get a GOOD look at his face when he changed!  How do I find a fugitive SUPER-HERO in a city of over a million people!"

In nearby Berkeley, Don Hall is dismayed to learn that he is being laid off from his job at the "Federal Welfare Center" due to budget cuts. He muses bitterly about how it seems "humanism has become a dirty word" since the 60s," but also about how his feelings of anger almost caused him to "act like Hawk!"  Spotting a couple of thugs attacking another man with a tire iron, Don assumes his superheroic identity and intervenes, getting between the men and trying to persuade them to "discuss things rationally".  One of the thugs sneers about the name of the Dove; "What kind of name is that for a COSTUMED CLOWN?"  "Boy, do I feel OLD!", thinks Don; "They don't even remember what it MEANS!"  As he stops the thug with a bit of "passive resistance" judo, Don reflects on how "hawk" and "dove" were familiar labels all those years ago when he and his brother quarreled incessantly over the Vietnam war.  Then the names acquired new meanings for them when they were locked in a mobster's hideout and a power represented by a "mysterious voice" granted them superhuman powers and costumed identities!  "I only wanted to protect the VICTIM, but Hank seemed to get TRUE PLEASURE out of pounding the CHEESE out of criminals!"  And yet, Don still misses his brother, as well as their father, a judge who functioned as the "moderate ground between two extremes" and warned them (though he didn't know about their costumed identities) "You boys don't THINK about your positions!  You live by your REFLEXES, not your MINDS!"  (It's indicated Judge Hall is still alive, but that the brothers haven't seen him in a long time.) Returning to his home, Don quarrels with his significant other, Michelle, who urges him to move beyond civil service and "use your talents in politics, communications, anything!"  When Don responds that his brother Hank's mundane life has gotten him nothing besides "a CREDIT LINE and an ULCER," Michelle replies in turn, "There it is again!  Your BROTHER!  Don, I love you... but you've got to stop measuring everything you DO against your BROTHER... or you'll never be more than HALF a person!"  And as she storms out, Don wonders if her indictment is correct; "For what, after all, is a DOVE without a HAWK... YIN without YANG?" 

Elsewhere, gangster Thomas Kurland looks at a picture of the unmasked Hawk (apparently a police-type sketch based on the account of the thug who saw him change) and vows to learn his true identity and destroy him! He wonders if he should have pushed his son into joining his gang operaton, but "Maybe killing this HAWK charactre won't let YOU rest any easier... but it might help ME sleep a little better!"  And meanwhile, Batman's quest through newspaper records to track down the Hawk is getting nowhere-- until it occurs to him to seek out the Hawk's one-time partner, the Dove, who is known to operate in Berkeley.  "If I can track him down, maybe he can lead me to the HAWK-- before Kurland plucks his feathers!"  Meanwhile, the man he is really seeking, Hank Hall, has come home to his suburban abode, only to find that his wife Linda isn't any happier with him than Don's Michelle is with him.  She knows that Hank is the Hawk, and she accuses of him of "taking out your frustrations on any poor CROOK that happens along" instead of facing the real problems with his life and their relationship.  Angered, Hank reaches out to slap his wife!  It's not clear from the art if the blow actually connects, but Hank is still horrified at himself.  "But in moments, HORROR has turned to RAGE," as Hank bemoans how "I did everything a man's SUPPOSED to do... served in the Navy... got a good job... a good wife" and yet everything is turning out wrong!  And yet again, instead of dealing with his problems, Hank takes refuge in his Hawk identity and sets out-- riding a motorcycle commandeered from an innocent by-rider-- to bring Thomas Kurland Sr. to justice.  He convinces himself that is what "the-- ENTITY that GAVE me these powers" would want; "I've got a responsibility to a HIGHER POWER!" 

Across the Bay, Don Hall is roused from bed by an unexpected visit from the Batman ("May I come in?  The neighbors are starting to STARE..." ) He explains that he was able to track down Don's identity by matching names from an old Elmond, Oregon phone directory (the town where the young Hawk and Dove lived) to men in their late 20's in the Berkeley neighborhood where the Dove has been seen-- and suggests that if Don wants to continue as a secret crimefighter, he'd better get an unlisted phone number!  Upon learning of the danger Hank is in, Don willingly reveals Hawk's true identity to Batman and goes along to help his brother.  They don't find Hank, but they find his wife Linda captured as a hostage by Kurland's thugs!  In his eagerness to stop them without violence, the Dove accidentally propels himself and one of the gangsters out of a high-rise window, but manages to save himself and the thug with his super-athletic abilities.  Ironically, this convinces the thug that the Dove is as much of a "maniac with feathers" as his brother the Hawk, and he fearfully reveals to Batman the whereabouts of Kurland Sr.
As Batman and the Dove go in pursuit, Batman warns Dove that if he wants to help his brother, he needs to avoid any more "dumb moves" trying to stop the enemy without violence; "I appreciate your PHILOSOPHY-- but we may not be able to AFFORD it right now."

And meanwhile, Hawk is raiding a nightclub owned by Kurland's crime empire.  So intent is he on tracing the ganglord, that he seizes a girl dancer and threatens, "Does somebody TALK... or does this little lady get HURT?"  "Once, Hank Hall would have been REPELLED by what he is doing... but his mind is CLOUDED now, by ANGER, by FRUSTRATION, by all the ways life has BAFFLED and CHEATED him..."   "Fortunately," he is saved from the crime of harming an innocent when one of Kurland's thugs knocks him out from behind! 

Batman and the Dove spot the unconscious Hawk being taken out to Kurland's boat in the harbor, but they cannot intervene for fear the gangsters will kill Hawk before they can reach him.  Instead, they will try to sneak aboard the boat-- planting an explosive on the hull as a distraction-- and not only rescue Hawk but get enough evidence against Kurland to "put him away for a long, long time".  And meanwhile, locked in the hold, Hawk has an epiphany.  Reflecting on the people he has hurt or almost hurt-- Kurland Jr., Linda, the nightclub dancer-- he reflects, "I-- I'm no better than the CREEPS I've been trying to STOP!  What's HAPPENING to me?"  And he is answered-- for the first time in twelve years-- by a voice out of nowhere, telling him, "You have just taken the FIRST STEP, Hank Hall!" "The Voice" tells him that neither he nor his brother have changed and grown in the way it hoped when it first granted them their powers.  Both have "atrophied"; "I had hoped, in time, you would realize the worth in BOTH your philosophies-- but you have not!"  Hank asks mercy from the voice he thinks is that of God, but it sets him straight on that point; "I am not divine, Hank Hall!  That is your GREATEST MISTAKE!  Thinking yourself above COMPASSION... on some divine CRUSADE that sets you ABOVE your fellow beings!  (But though it is not divine, we don't find out what exactly "The Voice" really is.)  "Perhaps your powers have prevented you from GROWING... perhaps only by LOSING them might you recapture YOURSELVES!"  And so, as he changes back to Hank Hall "for perhaps the last time," the ex-Hawk is told, "You can make amends by fulfilling your HUMAN potential...then when you have GROWN... when you are WORTHY... perhaps the powers will be YOURS again..!  Goodbye, Hawk.  I am confident that we shall meet again... ONE DAY..."

And below the ship, carrying out Batman's directions to plant a plastic explosive on the hull, the Dove also has a feeling that he is "about to lose something".  He prays that it is not his brother!   But what he loses is his costume and superhuman identity.  How can he help Batman save Hawk and capture Kurland and his gang, with only his normal human abilities? 

Aboard the ship, Kurland confronts Hank Hall and asks him, "Why'd you kill my son?"  Hank replies that he didn't intentionally kill him, but he was responsible and must face the consequences.  "I've been trying to PROVE something.. show my FATHER I was WORTH something...!"  And Kurland Sr. has qualms of his own, wondering if this young man is so different from his son whom he pushed into a dangerous life of crime.  Then Kurland is distracted by the bomb under his ship blowing up and Batman swinging onto the deck!  As Batman handles the rest of the gang, Don Hall sees his brother in danger, from one of Kurland's thugs aiming a gun at him, and lays out the man with a mighty punch!  Batman tells Don "Good work" but wonders why he is no longer in costume, and Hank says, "That's a long story... little brother".  Don is wondering what is wrong with Hank, who "just stood there" when he was about to be killed.  "And YOU laid into that thug like a BALL-PEEN HAMMER.  Talk about TURNABOUT, huh?"  Echoing "The Voice," Batman chides them both; "You've both been so afraid to admit you could be ANYTHING like the OTHER... that you've FROZEN yourselves into people you should have GROWN OUT of long ago!  We all have our VIOLENT sides... and our GENTLE sides.  We all HATE... and we all LOVE.  If we deny EITHER, we DIE a little inside.  As YOU did, Hank.  It's called being HUMAN."  (Yeah, I know, it's kind of ironic Batman being the one giving this little speech, especially considering how he's been portrayed so often since then, as obsessive and violent right up to the verge of killing.  Maybe he should have listened to himself.)  As Hank and Don begin to reminisce about their younger days, the final caption tells us, "They were products of their TIME... and perhaps, some day, that time will come AGAIN.  But before it DOES, they must learn again... what it means to be BROTHERS."

As far as I'm concerned it would have been just as well if this had been the last appearance of the Hawk and Dove.  And, indeed, in a "pre-Crisis" sense, it was.  During CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS (a series which I don't like nearly as much in retrospect as I did when it first came out-- and I don't think I'm alone in that) the Hawk and Dove are teenagers again and still have their powers, but the Dove is killed off in a quick "trivia death", leaving the Hawk alone.  There was another HAWK & DOVE series in which the Hawk was teamed up with a new female Dove-- I only read a few of those, and don't remember much about the series.  Then the Hawk was revealed to be the villain Monarch in one of DC's later "event" series, I think ARMAGEDDON (which I also didn't read) but I guess he too was killed off.  Better if this B & B story had been left to stand as the last statement on these two time-bound characters. 

At this time, BRAVE & BOLD had a backup feature "Nemesis" about a master-of-disguise type hero.  The stories by Cary Burkett never did much for me (though the art by Dan Spiegle was nice) so I won't take time to review the installment in this issue.

Showcase #75 (Hawk & Dove)

SHOWCASE #75; June 1968; DC Comics; Carmine Infantino listed in the indicia 
as editor (was there anything else he edited personally?); featuring the debut
of The Hawk and the Dove, created, plotted and drawn by Steve Ditko with 
script/dialogue by Steve Skeates.  On either side of the cover by Ditko, we 
have figures of the two heroes, the red and white costumed Hawk with clenched 
fist and aggressive scowl, and the blue and white Dove with meek, uncertain 
expression and posture; below the heroes' figures are their high school aged 
alter egos.  In the center, a series of panels of a screaming, stooping red  hawk
and a gentle, alarmed white dove, and the blurb, "In this world, those who 
seek justice often walk different paths; the TOUGH and the TAME!  The 
CHALLENGER and the CHALLENGED!  This is our tale....a tale of two  brothers...the HAWK
and the DOVE!"  Unusually, the characters' logo appears  at the bottom of the
cover rather than the top.

Review by Bill  Henley

With the nation once again bitterly split into hawks and doves  over Iraq
(no, I'm not going to get political this time and discuss my own views  on the
issue), it seems like an appropriate time to review this quirky series, a  late
Silver Age attempt by DC to exploit "relevance", as well as the talents of 
Steve Ditko, who with Stan Lee had been responsible for the creation of the most
successful new superhero of the 60's. 

In the Prologue, we find  dueling counter-demonstrations on a college campus,
as supporters of the war  (presumably the one in Vietnam, though the word
Vietnam is never specifically  mentioned) carry signs urging, "Keep Up the
Bombing," "No Let-Up", and "Fight to  Win", while on the other side the slogans are
"Peace", "Pull Out" and "Stop the  Bombing".  Two younger than usual part
icipants, on opposing sides, are high  school students and brothers Hank and Don
Hall.  Dark-haired Hank, the  older of the two, clad in suit and bow tie 
complains about the peace  demonstrators and insists, "Force is the only way to make
them (apparently  meaning the wartime enemy, not the demonstrators) quit! 
Force is the only  thing they understand!"  Younger blond-haired Don, clad in
suit and bow tie  (did even the geekiest teenager in 1968 wear a bow tie?  Did 
*anyone*?)  on the other hand thinks that "compromise" is the key and 'if  we
give in, everybody'll be happy and we'll have peace!"  As the brothers  argue,
the older demonstrators on each side resort to more violent tactics, and  as
police arrive to quell a brewing riot,  they order "you kids" to "beat  it". 
Meanwhile, we see a shot of the nearby high school, where "students  not yet
old enough to participate in significant debate are content to  participate in
student government, sporting events and occasionally in doing  their
homework"... and between the two campuses stands the Elmond County  Courthouse, where
the father of the two Hall boys is judge.  As Part 1 of  the story "In the
Beginning..." opens, Judge Hall is dealing out the maximum  sentence to a hoodlum
named Dargo who has been found guilty of running a  protection racket on shop
owners.  Outraged by the stern judgment, Dargo  vows to have his "boys" take
revenge; "You're as good as dead right now,  Judge!  I SWEAR it!"  Unfazed, the
judge meets his son Hank, who is  returning from the demonstration and
complaining about the foolishness of his  brother and the other "peaceniks"; "I
thought college was supposed to make you  smart, but these weirdies don't even
have enough brains to know when they're  wrong!"  The judge suggests that, in
that case, "Explain to me just what  makes YOU right and THEM wrong!"  When Hank
has no answer, his father  comments, "Neither of you has thought this thing
out!  That makes you BOTH  wrong!"  When Don arrives and defends his own
beliefs-- "Violence only  begets more violence! Nothing is ever solved by
fighting!"-- the judge is  scarcely more charitable, pointing out that "sometimes
violence is necessary"  and that neither brother has learned the use of logic to
solve problems;  "Sometimes it surprises me that my two sons could act so
irrationally!" (The  Judge seems to have been Ditko's own viewpoint character,
championing  quasi-Objectivist reason and logic against his sons' emotion.  Though it
was fairly clear that between the two boys, Ditko's own views were closer to
Hawk's.) 

The discussion of violence is interrupted by an act of  real violence, as one
of Dargo's thugs opens the judge's chambers door and hurls  a bomb.  Urged by
their father, the boys reach safety behind a desk but the  judge himself is
caught in the blast and injured.   While Don stays  with his father, Hank is
tempted to chase the bomber but goes for medical help  instead.  Later, as the
judge rests in a hospital bed, the boys and their  mother are relieved he
survived, but Hank is concerned about another attack,  while Don is confident a
police guard will provide safety. 

In Part  2, "A Voice...A Voice...." the boys are heading to the hospital for
another  visit after school the next day when Hank spots and recognizes the
crook who  threw the bomb.  Hank wants to "jump him" right there, but Don
restrains  him and urges calling the police instead.  They compromise on tailling
the  crook together, with Don hoping to spot a policeman along the way.  No cop 
shows up when you need one, but the boys trail the bad guy to an "old
theatrical  warehouse" being used as a gang hideout.  Impulsive as always, Hank
insists  on crawling in through an open window, and Don follows him; "I shouldn't,
but  you ARE my brother and I can't let you go in there alone!"  However,
while  trying to move quietly, the brothers accidentally lock themselves in a
room,  where they can hear the gangsters plotting-- to invade Judge Hall's
hospital  room and finish the job of murder.  Outraged, Hank is ready to try to break
out of the rooma and confront the crooks directly, but again Don restrains
him,  pointing out that it will do their father no good if the two of them
attract the  gang's attention and are killed.  But Don's plan to break out after
the  gang leaves and call the police goes awry, as they find themselves
helplessly  trapped in the room and unable to break out.  As Hank pounds uselessly on
the door, a desperate and frustrated Don muses, "If only we had some sort of
super-strength....or power..."  Hank jeers at Don's "fantasies", but 
suddenly it becomes more than a fantasy, as a "disembodied voice speaks  up. 
"POWER?  YOU WISH POWER?  THEN SO BE IT!  WHO OR WHERE  I AM IS NOT FOR YOU TO KNOW
(but) YOU HAVE BEEN CHOSEN!  YOUR WISH SHALL BE  GRANTED!  YOU BOTH SHALL HAVE
POWERS, IF THIS IS WHAT YOU SEEK!  WHAT  POWERS DO YOU WISH?"  Hank wants the
power to take on the gangsters and  "SMASH them...TEAR them apart so they'll
never commit crimes again!"  Don,  on the other hand, is content to receive
the power to "save Father" and leave  retribution to the police.  As the
brothers argue some more, the Voice  interrupts; "SILENCE, BOTH OF YOU!  WE SEEM TO
HAVE HERE A HAWK AND A  DOVE!  SO BE IT!  LET THE TRANSFORMATION BEGIN!" 
Suddenly, the  brothers' ordinary clothes transform into costums, as Hank is clad
in bright red  and white costume and mask with flaring wing feathers, and  Don
finds  himself wearing a baby-blue outfit with white trim and droopy feathers.
  Hank is delighted with his new look, but Don complains, "Yick!  I didn't 
WANT a costume-- let alone one as sickening as this get-up!"  Talking back  to
the Voice, Don complains that he doesn't want to go through life looking like 
a bird, but the Voice explains that the transformatiion into Hawk and Dove is
temporary and will end when the powers are no longer needed.  After that, 
if the powers are needed again, the brothers can regain them by saying the
words  "Hawk!" and "Dove!"-- but the change will work only if "injustice" is
present,  and once the powers are no longer needed, "you will revert to your
ordinary  selves!"  (Thus, unlike most superheroes, Hawk and Dove did not have 
complete control either of when they assumed their costumed identities nor when 
they returned to their alter egos.)  But what sort of powers do they have, 
Hank/Hawk demands to know.  Simply "EXTENSIONS OF THOSE ABILITIES YOU  ALREADY
POSSESS!  WHATEVER YOU COULD DO MOMENTS AGO, YOU CAN DO INFINITELY  BETTER, WITH
GREATER EASE AND CONSUMMATE SKILL!"  (This was in line with  Steve Ditko's
apparent preferences, in creating characters, as he seemed to like  costumed
acrobats and fighters without cosmic-level super-powers or outre  abilities.) 

As the Voice takes its leave, the brothers find that  with their new powers
they can easily break through the door that previously  trapped them.  But will
they be in time to save their father?  As a  corrupt orderly allows the
gangsters to approach Judge Hall's room, Hawk and  Dove scramble across rooftops
and over parked cars, swim a river and climb a  drainpipe to reach the
hospital..  Hawk scorns Dove who is afraid of being  seen, but Dove scores a point on
his brother when they find that, even with  their increased powers, Dove can
actually swim and climb better than  Hawk.

But as Part 3 "The Birds Fly!" opens, the real question is, can the  Dove
fight-- and will he?  As the costumed boys burst into the hospital  room, they
find they are the only thing standing between their father and the  gangsters,
who have shot the police guard from behind.  Hawk plows into the  thugs with
flying fists and "a harshness bordering on base cruelty", "You won't  get any
mercy from ME!  I'm gonna play this the same way YOU'RE playing  it!"  But how
will his opposite, the Dove, play it?  He tries to talk  the crooks out of
their murder plot, dodging their blows as he insists that they  have no chance to
win and might as well surrender to the police.  A lucky  blow dazes Dove and
the crooks push him out the window, from which he would fall  to his death
except that his enhanced abilities enable him to grab a flagpole  and swing back
up to the wndow.  Meanwhile, Hawk is so intent on committing  mayhem with the
lesser thugs that he does not notice the gang leader pulling a  gun and moving
to "finish off the judge".  It is Dove who spots this threat  and grabs the
thug, disarming him and holding him helpless.  Then Hawk  crashes into the scene
and hits the gangleader with a smashing punch to the jaw,  much to Dove's
displeasure; "You didn't hafta do that!  I coulda held  him!  You're worse than a
witless barbarian!" 

With all the  gangsters out for the count, our heroes are left with their
father; "Looks like  we saved your hide, Judge!  No need to thank us, fighting
crime is how we  get our kicks!"  The Judge does thank his masked rescuers but
wants to know  their names; "Just call us the Hawk and the Dove!  It's up to
you to guess  which is which!"  An anxious Dove hurries his boastful brother
away,  pointing out that with the threat of the gang ended they may revert to
their  normal selves at any moment.  And indeed, as soon as they close the door 
behind them, Hawk and Dove are once more mere Hank and Don Hall.  Hank is 
eager to reveal their secret to their father and receive his accolades, and for 
once Don agrees with him, hoping the judge will sanction their secret costumed
crimefighting.  But they're in for a shock when they hear the judge tell a 
news crew that even though he is grateful for the Hawk and Dove's lifesaving 
intervention, "I cannot condone their actions!  There can be no place for 
vigilante tactics!   Private citizens, no matter how honorable their  intentions
are, cannot be allowed to take the law into their own hands!   Even hardened
criminals are guaranteed due process of law!  I suggest that  the two who call
themselves the Hawk and the Dove turn themselves over to the  authorities!" 
Once again the brothers agree, that this quashes any thought  of revealing
their secret to their father.  But they disagree on what to do  about it, as Don
is ready to give up the identity of the Dove-- "I never wanted  to get into
this crime-fighting bag anyway!", but Hank complains that   "Dad's been a judge
so long he's starting to think like a lawbook" and doesn't  understand the good
the Hawk and Dove can do.  The brothers walk away still  squabbling, as Hank
calls his brother a "coward" for wanting to give up  crime-fighting, and Don
retorts that Hank "can't beat up everybody you disagree  with".  But the real
decision whether Don will become the Dove again-- or  Hank, the Hawk- lies with
a higher power, one even higher than the "Mysterious  Voice".  "Shall we
write FINIS to the Hawk and the Dove?  Have their  careers ended before they even
got started?  NOT ON YOUR LIFE!  THE  HAWK AND THE DOVE appear in their own
magazine on sale June 25th!"  As far  as I know, this was the only instance
where it was announced that a SHOWCASE  tryout series would get its own book
within the SHOWCASE issue itself--though  around this time, there were several
series which got their own titles quickly  after only a single tryout issue.  It
seems to kind of negate the point of  having a SHOWCASE tryout, if the decision
to  launch a new title is already  made even before the SHOWCASE issue
appears. 

The ensuing HAWK AND  DOVE title lasted just 6 issues, dated Aug-Sept. 1968
through June-July  1969.  Steve Ditko only stayed around for the first two of
those  issues.  The fannish rumor at the time was that the hawk/dove dichotomy 
carried over into the comic's creative team itself, as Ditko was a confirmed 
hawk while scriptwriter Steve Skeates was a dove.  As a result, Ditko  tended
to draw and plot Hawk as heroic and Dove as ineffectual and bumbling,  while
Skeates slanted the dialogue the other way.  Clearly an unstable  situation,
which ended as Gil Kane took over the artwork with issue #3 and  stayed on for
the run of the title (and scripted #5 and 6 as well).  Kane  was an ideal
choice to carry on the visual look established by Ditko, and did a  good job of
putting forth the idea that both heroic brothers had things to  learn, the Hawk
when to restrain his aggressive impules and the Dove when  violence in defense
of self and others was unavoidable.  But as with so  many innovative
late-Silver Age creations at DC, the run was short as management  pulled the plug
after about a year.  As with Ditko's Creeper and other  late-SA creations, though,
DC couldn't leave the battling brothers alone in  limbo.  They hung out off
and on with the Teen Titans.  In 1981,  writer Alan Brennert and Jim Aparo
produced a Batman/Hawk and Dove team-up which  made a perfect coda to the series
(and ought to be included if DC ever does a  collection of the series) in which
Batman encounters Hawk and Dove who have  grown to adulthood but still not
wholly learned to resolve their philosophical  differences or use their powers
to their full potential.  It might be  better if that had been the final end of
Hawk and Dove, but the Brennert B &  B story was wiped out of continuity, as
the characters reverted to teenage and  the original Dove was killed off in
CRISIS IN INFINITE EARTHS; Hawk survived,  made some appearances with the New
Teen Titans, and starting in 1988 got a new  HAWK AND DOVE series teamed with a
new, female Dove.  (As the 80's turned  into the 90's era of grim'n'gritty,
down'n'dirty "heroes", Hawk was certainly  more in turn with the era than the
Dove.)  Still later, Hawk suffered the  indignity of being named at the last
minute as the villainous Monarch in the  ARMAGEDDON crossover miniseries (was
that it?  those crossovers tend to run  together in my mind) after a plan to make
the revived Captain Atom-- another  much-changed Ditko creation-- the bad guy
fell through.)

But the Hawk and  Dove are not forgotten, and even made a recent appearance
in a new medium as  they were spotlighted in an animated JUSTICE LEAGUE
UNLIMITED episode, recruited  for the expanded JL and still in their original Hank
and Don Hall  identities.  Perhaps, as I noted at the start, their time has come
around  again....