Grendel (comics): Difference between revisions

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{{work|wppage=Grendel (comics)}}
{{trope}}
[[File:grendel-2006_10692006 1069.jpg|frame|Meet the face of aggression.]]
 
'''''Grendel''''' is a comic book series created by Matt Wagner. The titular character first appeared in the anthology title ''"Comico Primer''" #2 (1982). He held his own short-lived black and white series (1983-1984), and also appeared as back-up strip in ''"Mage''" (1984-1986)., Beforebefore being launched inas an original full-color series, lasting from 1986 to 1990. Various mini-series featuring Grendel regurarly appeared through the [[The Nineties|1990s]]. Reprints and some new material have continued appearing in the 21st century.
 
Grendel is a comic book series created by Matt Wagner. The titular character first appeared in the anthology title ''"Comico Primer''" #2 (1982). He held his own short-lived black and white series (1983-1984), and also appeared as back-up strip in ''"Mage''" (1984-1986). Before launched in an original full-color series, lasting from 1986 to 1990. Various mini-series featuring Grendel regurarly appeared through the [[The Nineties|1990s]]. Reprints and some new material have continued appearing in the 21st century.
 
The subject matter? Hunter Rose is a bestselling author, a sophisticated gentleman who attends high class parties. He's also Grendel, a ruthlessly efficient assassin who slowly takes over ''all'' the mobs in New York City. Matt Wagner's stories of Grendel are [[Film Noir|noir]] tales, black and white and red only. They are not only tales of a criminal mastermind, but a study in aggression.
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This is only one of the few series where the story can continue after the main character's death. There are stories set in the near future, with Stacy Palumbo's daughter, Christine Spar, who wrote a book about Grendel, and even stories in the far, far future, where Grendel has become something of a religion.
 
Has nothing to do with ''[[Beowulf]]'', or any of the films named ''[[Grendel]]''.
 
{{examples}}
 
{{tropelist}}
* [[Action Mom]]: Christine Spar.
* [[After the End]]: The ''War Child'' continuity clearly takes place in a post-apocalyptic world. Most of the Middle Eastern OPEC states are now an abandoned wasteland, and Europe is shown to consist largely of bombed-out ruins.
* [[Anti-Hero]]: Christine Spar, who adopts the Grendel persona to avenge her son's death. Argent could also count.
* [[Anti-Villain]]: Hunter Rose was an early attempt at this in comics. While clearly a [[Villain Protagonist]], he's also explicitly shown to have [[Even Evil Has Standards|a strict]] [[Rape Is a Special Kind of Evil|moral code]], and deeply cares for both his lover and for his adoptive daughter. His rival, Argent, is shown as a savage killer whom even the police fear.
** The third Grendel, Brian Li Sung, is a more straightforward example. Shattered by his lover's death, his desire to understand what happened to her, combined with his desperate poverty and his returning alcoholism, makes him feel [[Demonic Possession|possessed by Grendel]] and driven to commit horrible acts. {{spoiler|He's arguably a subversion, as he succeeds in resisting the most violent instincts, leading to [[Redemption Equals Death]].}}
** Orion and Jupiter Assante, and Grendel Prime are arguably the [[Trope Codifier|Trope Codifiers]]s in comics. All three characters commit horrible acts, but the former two appear to do so for [[The Greater Good]], while Prime himself is very much an [[Even Evil Has Standards]] character.
* [[Anything That Moves]]: Crystal Kennedy.
** Her grandfather's pretty close, too.
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* [[Creepy Child]]: Stacy Palumbo, especially given that she's the cause of Hunter Rose's death.
* [[Cyberpunk]]: What the Grendel stories eventually become.
* [[Cyborg]]: A few characters have cybernetic implants, such as Captain Wiggins' artificial eye. [[Cybernetics Eat Your Soul]] comes into play more than once. Taken [[Up to Eleven]] with Grendel-Prime, who is a full-body conversion ''powered by sunlight.''
* [[Death Seeker]]: It's probably easier to list characters that ''don't'' have at least overtones of this.
* [[Demonic Possession]]: Occasionally discussed as part of taking on the Grendel identity.
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* [[Gentleman Thief]]: Grendel seems like this ''until he stabs you in the eyes.''
* [[Hero Antagonist]]: Argent the Wolf, an [[Anti-Hero]] example who's determined to take down Hunter Rose.
** Captain Wiggins is another example.
* [[Intercontinuity Crossover]]: ''Batman/Grendel''
** Especially notable in that not only are both crossovers canon for Grendel, the sequel comic serves as a major plot point in Grendel Prime's life.
* [[Karma Houdini]]: Tujiro. {{spoiler|Until he gets what he deserves centuries later.}}
* [[Knight Templar]]: All of the Orion's Sword Grendels who hold true to the code qualify to some extent, but Grendel-Prime lives and breathes this.
* [[Laser Blade]]: Grendel-Prime's weapon of choice.
* [[Legacy Character]]: Hunter Rose to Christine Spar to Brian Li Sung, then a centuries-long gap until Eppy Thatcher. Orion Assante inherits the title from Eppy, and while his son Jupiter eventually becomes Grendel-Khan, the true heir of the Grendel identity at that point becomes Grendel Prime.
** Hunter Rose sees himself and Stacy as this.
* [[Living Lie Detector]]: Captain Wiggins' cybernetic eye lets him read biopatterns.
* [[Lost Superweapon]]: The sun-disc from the ''War Child'' series. {{spoiler|The missing component to make the thing work is Grendel-Prime himself.}}
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* [[Mundane Fantastic]]: Grendel is a completely normal man who takes over the New York mob. His archenemy is a werewolf.
** Orion Assante's essentially a well-meaning but slightly perverted bureaucrat. He also takes over the world in a dictatorship, despite being unquestionably the least militant lead Grendel in the series.
* [[No Name Given]]: While all Grendels aspire to this in service to the Khan, Grendel-Prime has utterly abandoned his former life.
* [[Old Shame]]: The Comico black-and-white miniseries, as well as the character's ''introduction in Comico Primer #2.''
** To an extent, Wagner feels this of his original concept of even Devil By the Deed, what with the line about [[True Art Is Angsty|Grendel being the spirit of society's mediocrity.]]
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* [[Our Werewolves Are Different]]
* [[Plot-Relevant Age-Up]]: Jupiter Assante in ''Grendel: War Child.''
** Also his father in Devil's Reign.
* [[Psycho Serum]]: The Grendel drug that is the source of Eppy Thatcher's abilities and madness.
** Vampires eventually succumb to this in the blood of The First.
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* [[Retired Badass]]: Argent, in ''Devil's Legacy''.
* [[Samurai]]: Orion Assante's Grendel army in later series has major overtones of this, right down to the [[Seppuku|ritual suicides]] and the [[Katanas Are Just Better|standard-issue katanas.]]
** Grendel Tales back covers feature a motif of the symbols of individual Grendel clans. One of them is clearly based on [[Iconic Logo|Japanese mon]].
* [[Screwed by the Network]]: The title saw a delay of several years due to the bankruptcy of its original publisher (Comico). During the interim, Comico's owners tried to claim Grendel as a company asset and prevent Wagner from taking the character elsewhere. This also held up Dark Horse reprints of the Comico issues, which eventually went through without further complications.
* [[Shared Universe]]: The "Grendel Tales" spinoffs, taking place after the Grendel ideal's ascent to world domination, and involving characters who aren't actual avatars of Grendel.
* [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]]: a huge chunk of ''Behold the Devil'' was about Lucas Ottoman interviewing people about Grendel and eventually coming to realize that he was Hunter Rose. Of course, the readers know nobody knew who Grendel was until ''after'' his death, but it's still shocking when {{spoiler|Grendel nonchalantly slits his throat and sets him on fire}}. More than that, Lucas's girlfriend, Detective Liz Sparks {{spoiler|loses an eye, six fingers, and is burned over forty percent of her body}}. Wagner really doesn't want you to like Grendel.
* [[Skunk Stripe]]: Hunter Rose and Christine Spar
* [[StraightInvisible Gayto Gaydar]]: {{spoiler|Argent was cast out of his tribe and cursed to his current form for being this. Jupiter Assante also qualifies.}}
* [[Super Soldier]]: The Paladin/Grendel-Prime
* [[Tropes Are Not Bad]]: The entire point of War Child, which plays with dozens of post-apocalypse tropes at once.
* [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]]: ''Grendel: Devil's Legacy'' about Christine Spar, Stacy Palumbo's daughter
** Given that cybernetics and similar leaps in technology are available, [[Zeerust|the 80s fashion is still overwhelming.]] Despite coming later, The Devil Inside fits this trope better, as only Wiggins' cybernetic eye gets much showcase.
* [[Villain Protagonist]]
* [[Villain with Good Publicity]]: Hunter Rose is an uppercrust bestselling author, as is Christine Spar. Tujiro is a respected Kabuki performer and {{spoiler|centuries later, Pope.}}
** To say nothing of the Khans themselves.
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{{reflist}}
{{IGN Top 100 Villains}}
[[Category:Grendel{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Comic Books]]
[[Category:Comic Books of the 1980s]]
[[Category:US Canadian Comics‎]]
[[Category:The Eighties]]
[[Category:Grendel]]