| March
17, 2008
Ron Garney to draw Skaar, Son of Hulk
It was announced at WWLA that Ron Garney would be joining Greg
Pak as the artist for the upcoming Skaar, Son of Hulk comic that
comes out in June and it will be a 12 issue maxi-series. Greg Pak
also talked about it on Marvel.com as shown below:
"Babies always make for good announcements. Hell, just look
at Jennifer Lopez, Angelina Jolie, and Jessica Alba! But sometimes
a new baby in the house means more than just adorable tabloid photos—in
the case of the Hulk's son, Skaar, it means gamma-irradiated outer
space adventure!
Writer Greg Pak has had his eye on some sort of baby Banner ever
since the start of the epic year-long "Planet Hulk" storyline
in the pages of INCREDIBLE HULK, and now his plans come to fruition
this fall with the 12-part SKAAR: SON OF HULK. And just announced
this weekend, Hulk veteran Ron Garney, whose work can currently
be seen in WOLVERINE, will be joining the project as artist.
Garney helped to re-launch INCREDIBLE HULK in 1999, where his attention
to detail wowed fans. With the announcement still ringing in the
ears of the press, we spoke to Pak about what Ron's pencils mean
to the series, and what's in store for this mystery member of the
Banner clan.
"I loved Ron's work on INCREDIBLE HULK from a few years back,"
raves Pak. "He delivered these incredibly dynamic images that
were chock full of amazing detail, which is an amazing thing to
be able to do. And then I saw his recent work for WOLVERINE and
my head exploded."
To hear the writer tell it, Garney's addition to the SKAAR team
brought "much rejoicing throughout the land." Pak knows
that the artist, whose resume includes lengthy runs on CAPTAIN AMERICA,
UNCANNY X-MEN and AMAZING SPIDER-MAN among other work, provides
the final piece to the dream project he has been building for nearly
two years.
"The idea of a son of Hulk came about during the planning
stages of 'Planet Hulk,' shares Pak, "The climactic end of
the story created the possibility, and the shattered, war-torn world
that resulted would be a phenomenal setting for an entirely new
way to explore some of the themes that have animated the Hulk from
day one."
"Skaar Rising"
by John Romita Jr.
SKAAR: SON OF HULK focuses on the child of the Hulk and Caira the
Oldstrong, his now-deceased wife. With his mother dead and his father
back on Earth, Skaar grows up fending for his life on the post-apocalyptic
planet of his birth, Sakaar.
"There's a grand tradition of stories that explore the fantasy
of savage survival," explains Pak. "Maybe the more civilized
and protected yet weirdly complicated and exposed the real world
becomes, the more we're attracted to stories about barbaric worlds
where the rules are brutally simple. After battling bureaucracy
and petty hypocrisy all day long, it can be nice to escape into
a fantasy world where people survive by their wits and fists and
swords.
"But there can be an element of wish-fulfilling denial to
these kinds of stories—an artificial dream of noble savagery
that can hide the true costs of brutalization and war. With SKAAR:
SON OF HULK we're embracing—and exploding—that fantasy,
mining it for all its epic adventure and harrowing subtext."
But what of Skaar's folks? How does Skaar view his parents, and
where does he fit in the grand Hulk epic? Pak gives the history
of Hulk offspring:
"Betty Banner was pregnant once but miscarried," the writer
reminds. "And there have been intimations that the Scorpion
might be the child of Bruce Banner and Monica Rappaccini. But Skaar
is the first confirmed child of the Hulk in the mainstream Marvel
Universe. I don't think I'm spoiling too much by intimating that
in the fullness of time, Skaar may very well find himself face to
face with a certain Green Goliath."
Although Skaar won't be meeting up with his emerald dad any time
soon, Pak promises that a "mysterious Earthman" will be
playing an important part in the first Skaar story arc."
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