Commando (Comic Book): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[The Neidermeyer]]: Officers who aren't well liked by the enlisted men often show up. If they're seen from the perspective of the troops, they're usually of the aforementioned [[General Failure]] type, but when they're an important character themselves, their story is typically about them winning the respect of their troops. A relatively popular example is to team up a unit of rough and ready [[ANZA Cs]] with a [[Stiff Upper Lip|by-the-book Englishman]].
* [[The Neidermeyer]]: Officers who aren't well liked by the enlisted men often show up. If they're seen from the perspective of the troops, they're usually of the aforementioned [[General Failure]] type, but when they're an important character themselves, their story is typically about them winning the respect of their troops. A relatively popular example is to team up a unit of rough and ready [[ANZA Cs]] with a [[Stiff Upper Lip|by-the-book Englishman]].
** It's not too uncommon to have a [[Sergeant Rock]] mistaken for a Neidermeyer.
** It's not too uncommon to have a [[Sergeant Rock]] mistaken for a Neidermeyer.
* [[Pin Pulling Teeth]]: Not featured as much as you'd think, but they're certainly there.
* [[Pin-Pulling Teeth]]: Not featured as much as you'd think, but they're certainly there.
* [[Recurring Character]]: Usually averted, owing to the fact that that [[Loads and Loads of Characters|there's too many to keep track of]]. However, ''Commando'' has been sneaking in a few recurring characters over the years, mostly by writers who are so established within the company that they can more or less get away with it.
* [[Recurring Character]]: Usually averted, owing to the fact that that [[Loads and Loads of Characters|there's too many to keep track of]]. However, ''Commando'' has been sneaking in a few recurring characters over the years, mostly by writers who are so established within the company that they can more or less get away with it.
** The most notorious example is the [[Ragtag Bunch of Misfits]] Ramsey's Raiders, who've made it through an astonishing '''''17''''' issues. [[Take Our Word for It|That's a lot]].
** The most notorious example is the [[Ragtag Bunch of Misfits]] Ramsey's Raiders, who've made it through an astonishing '''''17''''' issues. [[Take Our Word for It|That's a lot]].

Revision as of 13:27, 11 August 2014

Commando For Action and Adventure, formerly known as Commando War Stories in Pictures, and colloquially known as Commando Comics, are a series of British comic books that primarily draw their themes and backdrops from the various incidents of the World Wars I and II. The comic, still in print today, was a Spiritual Successor to the earlier Battle Picture Library and War Picture Library series, which have since been discontinued. The comic is noted for its distinctive 7 × 5½ inch, 68 page format that became a standard for these kinds of stories.

The general tone is more The Guns of Navarone than Saving Private Ryan; the horrors of war are still there, but they don't overpower the stories. Over the years, the "Boy's Own Adventures" attitude has been toned down a bit, but it's still a mostly optimistic view of war, viewing it more as a necessary evil than a fun time for the boys.

This comic book contains the following tropes: