In L.I.F.E. Brigade, Issue 1, we met a cast of fascinating characters four times and then watched them hide in caves twice. Writer, maniac, artist, editor, maniac, publisher and maniac Craig Stormon started the indie comic company Blue Comet Press and was the sole driving force behind most of its comics. Being in total control of all of them didnāt stop him from canceling all of them. Most after the first installment, some before it! Several Craig Stormon titles debuted at #0 and were canceled before their first issue. But L.I.F.E. Brigade was Blue Cometās premier series, meaning it didnāt get canceledā¦ it got canceled twice. Twice the cancellations of every other Craig Stormon title!
It just wouldnāt be a Stormon production without an unhinged editorial section. In the first issue he reviewed a cool party, guilt tripped a fellow artist, and bragged about getting shitcanned. Iām cutting twenty other crazy things for the sake of brevity, a sin Craig Stormon would physically attack me for. In this editorial heāll talk up his revolutionary art, invent the dumbest word youāve ever heard, apologize for his terrible art, introduce a hot new artist, get carried away on a lie escalator, and then start a war with Marvel using prosecutable libel.
Weāre on page nothing! This is the inside cover, where there would usually be an in-your-face ad for RoboTrucks: The Lost Forever, a Taiwanese shovelware game thatās just a reskinned Puzzle Bobble. But Blue Comet comics have no ads! Itās a moral stance, like 1900HOTDOG, and not because weāre both too fucking crazy for RFPs.
Donāt worry if you forgot the rich story of the first L.I.F.E. Brigade. If thereās one thing Craig Stormonās great at, itās recapping what just happened even if that means recapping it while itās happening. Like the caverns? Remember the caverns? Youāll remember the caverns.
*Remember the caverns!
Iām glad we reminded people about the caves twice in the first panel. Thereās no need to rehash why the entire planet is reverse evolving into obliteration, because itās not anymore. I donāt mean that problem has been fixed, I mean Craig forgot the plot between issues and now the Earth was ravaged by nuclear war.
Think of this as freestyle comic booking, Craig Stormon remembers the important things: The characters. In the first issue we learned that Ray Gun Kid is furious and quick to laser, but we never saw it.
Maybe you were expecting some violent showdown with an alien army, but thatās not the reality of laser ownership: 70% of ray gun fatalities happen in the home, and are telepathic space robots.
Youāve all innately absorbed storytelling rules, like that every scene serves a purpose. Is this setting up a later plot point involving Ray Gun Kid and a tragically ray gunned kid? What was Oracle doing in that cave? He changed the subject awfully fast, didnāt he? Maybe weāre supposed to be suspicious of Oracle now. This isnāt nothing, it canāt be.
You know how they say you should never jump in the water to save a drowning person, because theyāll blindly claw at you until you both drown? Thatās whatās happening to your brain right now. The story is drowning and everything you know is saying you have to save it with meaning, but it will only kill you if you try. None of this is ever mentioned again, and the scene ends with radioactive mutants.
I mean the next panel is screaming radioactive mutants.
There, your brain was trying to predict that. Thatās what would have happened if you jumped in the story pool to save Craig Stormon.
I maintain that Craigās drawings are so terrible they loop back around to actual art. Or at least they can fake it. Flash back to college, that showing you went to because you were trying to nail one of the artists. Mentally hang this panel in the gallery – youād spout some bullshit about subverting 1950s American iconography to impress them, right? Make the right sexy Lichtenstein pun and it would work, too.
Craig discovered a new tool this issue: Editorial notes. Like all new things he discovers, these will be used as confidently as they are incorrectly.
You have to be careful with Blue Comet comics. You canāt just laugh at something and move on. Sure, you caught the first three hilarious things about these panels:
-Craig felt the need to explain radioactive mutants twice like itās a highbrow concept that might fly over our heads. In his wood-paneled study and smoking jacket, sipping a brandy, tamping his pipe like āthe cannibals, you see, are from the radiation.ā
-The phrase āturned to cannibalism with blood-lust, and total insanity!ā like the mutants made a careful choice to embrace insane cannibal blood-lust as one might turn to Christ.
-He cuts in with an editorial note to make sure that when he said ādeath on their minds,ā you didnāt forget the last sentence when he told you they were insane blood-lusting cannibals.
You caught all of those, you chuckled sensibly, you moved on to read this paragraph. The obvious escaped you. Craig Stormon is the editor leaving that note, and heās also the writer. An editorial note is there to clarify something the writer may not have made clear, but without altering their words. They were Craigās words in the first place! If it occurred to him as an editor that āthey have death on their mindsā might be confusing phrasing, he as the writer could have just fixed it.
The rambling, the repetition, the typos, the editorial notes to himself ā I have this figured out. Craig Stormon doesnāt know about drafts. He legitimately never heard of the concept of a draft and is totally unaware of revision. He believes that once you art, itās done, and all you can do is watch helplessly as the world tears it apart. Thatās the only reason heād swap plotlines between issues and keep canceling his own comics. Heās frustrated that his art isnāt turning out right, but thinks heās powerless to do anything about it.
You and Craig might be panicking right now, wondering how our heroes are going to get out of this mess he wrote them into-
They probably donāt appreciate being called ānormal peopleā and āordinary folksā so hard by a visiting space troupe of psychic exploding lunatics. I come from a small central Oregon cattle town, and then I spent 20 years in Portland with satan-worshipping strippers and amateur cyborgs. If I went back home and started calling everybody āordinaryā you can bet Iād wake up inside a cow. Thatās what we did to city slickers in my town, we put them inside cows. Donāt mock our ordinary ways.
You probably get it. These people are normies. Not Chads or Stacys, just Michaels and Rebeccas. The 49%. Cable watchers, landline owners, the turkey sandwich of humanity. Craig worries you donāt get it. Theyāre real simple folk. These are blue collar irradiated cannibal destroyers. Whatās the best way to show that?
Itās so hard to explain all the ways this panel is funny. Itās not just the juxtaposition of a mundane brand on the tailgate of a mutant slaying battlewagon. I mean, it is that. But itās so much more! You have to know all about Craigās misfiring brain and his childlike understanding of the world. How he must define normalcy, having only guessed at normalcyās shape by observing its gravity fluctuations from his mental observatory six billion miles away.
Anyway, letās meet those normies. Those post apocalyptic accountants. Just shades of living beige, these simple honest hillfolk-
This huge-jawed hunk in a spandex bodysuit and AR goggles with his carefully vague āpalā – an enormous Indian who dresses like a bondage cowboy and calls himself Two-Ton ā blasts through a cannibal horde with an armored F-1050 before introducing himself as the Zone Ranger, and Craig Stormonās best descriptor for him is ānormal, ordinary folk.ā At the risk of sounding like an oblivious mother welcoming her daughterās roommate for the 19th consecutive Christmas, I think something else is going on here.
These honest churchgoing workaday Joes take L.I.F.E. Brigade back to their post-apocalyptic party compound, surely smelling of silicone and 100% of the worldās cocaine, where every member of this super tough space mercenary team has a total mental breakdown.
Hold on, this is supposed to be hundreds of years from now – in the first issue we saw Rochel Windraven with her tribe of techno-shamans all practicing psychic meditation. Youāre telling me itās so far in the future Indians have evolved ESP and the American government still keeps them on reservations?
Thatā¦ oh, that one actually tracks. Sorry.
Letās get the base tour from The Zone Ranger, whoās wearing 1/3rd of a shirt and not the 1/3rd youād expect.
He gives a tour like a 5 year old showing off a tree house. Look how many movies we have, and if we clean up we can watch any one we want as long as itās over before 9 oāclock. Letās check out the rec room and the fort Two-Ton set up in the closet ā itās got string lights! – before our heroes are shown to their bedrooms. Thrilling! Action!
Whoa, hold on. Is Captain Long John Lazer, notorious outer space mouthfreak, really about to get it on with Windy Blaze? Look at those names! Think of the potential for sexy puns!
āIs that John as long as I heard?ā
āMy favoriteās the Chinook, but I love all hot breezes.ā
āIs that permanent smile from disfiguring space herpes, or are you just happy to see me?ā
Haha he slammed the door straight in her face.
Itās a hallmark of any Craig Stormon title that our heroes almost consider fucking and then completely donāt, because you write what you know. Why bring up the sexual tension at all if youāre just going to dunk it in the garbage to write a daydream about military skeletons?
This isnāt super relevant. I only included it to establish that Long John Lazer cries through the maskhole, heās saying his own sound effects in the dialogue bubbles, and I just like the shocked skeleton.
Long John Lazer flashes back to how things got so bad, which should be easy because the first issue told us everything we need to know: Reverse evolution ray. People are becoming triceratopses because of an anti-evolution laser and the very specific ways the American education system failed Craig Stormon.
Hereās what that looks likeā¦
I wasnāt joking, Craig Stormon forgot the entire premise of this comic book in Issue 2. Itās no longer about rad dinosaurs who used to be porn stars (there had to be a few!), now itās just general societal collapse and nuclear fallout. But nevermind that, there are seven hundred more interesting things we need to talk about in this panel.
Why are the several real brands displayed so prominently? No way Blue Comet showed a racist duck drawing to an ad executive and locked down that Coke placement. This is legally prosecutable. Thereās not even an ironic commentary here, all we establish is that Radioactive Robert Smith loves his Porsche battlewagon. Look at Cool Disney Funkmaster. What the fuck is Hipster Lurch doing in those overall pockets? Thereās something beautiful about the naive earnestness of FOOD LINE, but no, forget all of that. Throw it in the fire. We have to talk about whatever this fucking thing is:
Is that supposed to be a child? Take in the context: the food lines, the gaunt mother holding him, itās supposed to be a starving kid, right? Not a Billy Zane homunculus? Itās a bald, hydrocephalic, simultaneously buff and malnourished mini-freak with a huge hog busting out of his polka dot panties ā thatās what Craig Stormon thinks children are. Itās a god damn shame that he died before we could do a documentary on his broken brain. He should have a syndrome named after him. I mean, I assume heās dead, because this world was not built to care for such special maniacs.
You wonāt believe this, but weāre already going to beat that panel in the next panel.
Society has descended into apocalyptic chaos and it looks exactly like Double Dragon fan drawings in a 1989 Nintendo Power. Just two radical gym rats fucking up a starvation line, milliseconds away from an argument about collateral dick damage. FOOD TODAY. The sign says. Thatās what a stroke victim writes while trying to repair the neural pathways responsible for understanding breakfast. No equivocations this time: This is art.
Letās check back in on Captain Long John Lazer. When we last left him he was tired from touring hallways and he did not want to fuck. Now heās-
Heās doing it again. Heās still there. Captain Long John Lazer has entered the Blue Balls Bermuda Triangle, and heāll never leave. Why is everyone so horny and nobody knows how to fuck? Itās like Craig Stormon is locked into geosynchronous orbit with sex. Heās always stuck right there, never farther away but never any closer. In any other story, those two panels are the surest setup for an action hero bang session. Thereās a third panel where she starts to drop the nightie, hard cut out to saxophones and stock footage of the beach.
āOK, guess we will not fuck I really wanted to do that goodbye again for the second time again!ā Windy Blaze goes home alone to workout them huge gorilla arms with a prominently branded dildo, while both Long John Lazer and Craig Stormon share the bad ending in this episode of Boner Twilight Zone.
Iām not sure what happens in the finale. But I think maybe the bad guys have captured some civilians and theyāre going to kill them?
Craigās done everything he set out to do: introduced his characters more times than a heartbroken son at a dementia ward, hid them in caves, had them tour an apartment complex, bought delicious Coca-Cola Food., they did not fuck, they never fucked, and they beat the alien reverse-evolution plot by forgetting about it. Itās time to confront the evil Vandanese emperor, who I guess is the bad guy.
Haha, you thought the setup was for some kind of feminist quip, a Return of the King āI donāt need no man, girls get it doneā moment, but no: Windraven doesnāt have a clever retort, what she does have is an Indian mindblast that turns alien brains into tapioca.
How did she pull off this perfect strategy ā which was showing up, having nothing to say, and psychic blasting an alien politician into gelatin? She, like everyone on the reservation, has a crystal ball full of ancestors! No time to delve into that because thereās something ungodly going on with her breasts. I donāt know if Craig was trying to draw a tight shirt or what, but it looks like eggs undergoing mitosis.
It looks like Batmanās pantyhose donāt fit right. If you squint real hard her tits look like a caricature of a pleasant librarian. Maybe I just figured out why none of Craig Stormonās characters fuck. Anyway THE END.
Ahh, but the aliens ALSO have wizards who can see the future! None of this had ever been mentioned before, and it probably wouldnāt have come up again if there had been a third issue, which there wasnāt, because Craig Stormon canceled his own comic after two completely insane issues that were mostly about caves and celibacy.
But wait! Thereās more! L.I.F.E. Brigade 2 ends with a bonus mini-issue teasing a new title by a different artist. This is Roller Coasters, a rollerskating superhero team whose powers, premise, and plot are never explained in all 12 pages of preview, which is mostly about how badly a roller-contortionistās ripped amazon girlfriend wants to get on top of him but doesnāt know what the next step is. Then the very last page abruptly jams every ounce of story in at once like itās Sunday night homework.
If youāre wondering why the art changed but the story is still manic gibberish about mostly but not quite ever fucking, itās because Craig Stormon insisted on writing it āfor consistency.ā Thatās perhaps the craziest move of all, that he took over writing the guest artistās comic because he was worried fans would notice inconsistencies in storytelling. An entire planet full of forgotten dino-people shrug in impotent fury, and then blink out of existence.
So this horny bench queen and her rollerskate club stumble on her boyfriend strapped into a cosmic man milking machine (the way she responds says this is not the first time), they completely buy his hasty cover story about a voyeuristic alien who wants to recruit every hot teen that wanders into his space dairy, and their response, every one of them, is āfuck yeah, me too!ā
Itās perfect. Iād buy every issue if it existed.
No title at Blue Comet made it very long. Craig Stormon got frustrated and bored after a few issues when he couldnāt figure out how to put the little people in his head outside of his basement apartment and inside of each other. But surely if L.I.F.E. Brigade, the premier title, only made it two issues, then Craig mustāve realized there was nothing to these extremely killable roller-virgins. This was their preview issue and he struggled through nothing for 11 pages only to slap a slashfic story prompt on the end. Iāll strap myself into the man-milker and flip the switch to GLORP if it got even a single issue-
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This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Alpha Scientist Javo, who has overloaded every intergalactic man-milker he’s been strapped into.
14 replies on “Nerding Day: L.I.F.E. Brigade 2 š”
The shocked skeleton is giving some Ray Smuckles energy.
The art . . . horrible, yet oddly appealing. Like 1960’s underground comix.
Also, it looks as though Mr. Stormon had indeed passed from our world
https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/craig-stormon-obituary?pid=178375578
Does this mean we can’t make fun of him anymore?
Every image of Windy Breeze’s face is a Todd Rundgren album cover, and nothing anyone says could change my mind.
Wowwww pinpoint shot from a direction I’d never have glanced in. I’m dead from this.
I will spend the rest of my life hating myself for not coming up with your screen name first. Thanks for thatš
YOU DIDN’T KNOW?! BEASTMAN YOU FURRY FOOL MYAAAAH!
As terrible as it is, I really wish there was a lot more LIFE Brigade. It’s just such a window into such a weird mind, it’s flawed in ways that fascinate.
“built-in to a rock cliff” shouldn’t it be “built into a rock cliff”? It seems that some hyphen crime is being committed here.
Among a litany of others
Are we positively sure that Craig Stormon was one human male and not some sort of alien hive mind?
Also, I can’t help noticing how every woman in this comic looks like Benedict Cumberbatch in drag.
Iām absolutely convinced that the art directors for the Wario Ware series took some inspiration from olā Stormon
Shocked skeleton would definitely fit into Skull-face bookseller Honda-san.