These Dewbacks are Pants (6)
Last Updated (Wednesday, 26 October 2011 21:48) Written by Administrator Tuesday, 26 October 2010 00:00
It's just 'pants'
Possibly late 1978 or sometime in '79. I do like this one.
"I can't see anything!"
"Have you tried BINOCULARS?"
And what about the Sandtrooper in panel 3? Running figures are indeed challenging, and it's interesting how the leg has been bent. I like how it's been drawn - not just dead front-on. The only prob is that he looks a bit like...
"Commander - Commander!"
"Oh, what is it now?!? Look. I told you to go before we left the base. But did you listen?"

Do you think it's a bit odd that these troopers should need to do mundane things like going to the loo? Well why not? They even have those y-front style armoured underpants.
But to be honest, when I was 9 or 10, I just assumed that they were all robots or something. This made it all the more fascinating that Luke and Han donned their exoskeletons to break into the Death Star prison block. It wasn't merely the World War II movie trick of donning an enemy uniform a la Richard Burton, but of pretending to be a robot! I was left wondering what the stripped robots looked like back at the control room.
Quite clearly, I was proud of the panel at bottom-right; I signed it! "Whitey" or "White" with a flourish of the biro. In joined-up writing an' all. I wouldn't surprised if this was the sort of thing my mate Niall started doing on his drawings once we learnt handwriting in school.
Suspense!
Interesting alternative spelling for the word 'moisture'.
But, but... "Is it Luke's home?" That's a genuine attempt at building suspense there folks.
Yikes - Giant Lizards!
I loved this picture. I couldn't ever remember seeing it in the film so maybe that made it even better. One evening, my dad arrived home from work having actually found a Star Wars Weekly comic in Easons, the big department store on O'Connell Street in Dublin city.
You can't imagine how buzzed I was to see this poster as the wrap-around cover! Surprisingly, I'd forgotten that they were named Dewbacks. Even more surprising is the fact that I removed the cherished cover, from the cherished comic and put it on the bedroom wall. You were supposed to do that with it but I was always very careful to look after my stuff. I'd be amazed watching some friends quickly reading-through a comic - taking in very little of the artwork - and then chucking it in the bin. After all, comics were for reading and re-reading over and over weren't they? Eventually I would have envisaged reuniting the covers with my SW comics, but over 30+ plus years the covers have disappeared. They'd have been in a poor state from being on the walls until I got into heavy rock and replaced them; but they'd still make my old SW comics look less eviscerated now. Maybe they'll all show up... in part of my mum and dad's house.
Special Edition: Hobbling Dewbacks
I'm sorry George, but yep: they looked absolutley pants too. Can you imagine a more uncomfortable ride? "I think... I'll just walk...
...or, use a spiffy cyber-hover-space-board. Thingy."







Comments
I used to love drawing in biro, it felt that bit more dangerous... that was until erasable pens became all the rage.
Dig the hyphenated 'G' - it took me a long time to figure out that I could write text first, add bubbles later.
Oh, and good use of pants as an adjective. I do this deliberately to confuse my American friends
Re: bubbles, I don't think I ever lightly roughed-in a drawing or lettering in pencil - got it right - and THEN inked it. I mean, at that age where'd be the fun in that?
'Pants'? Yes, it's a real Brit term. Not very clever considering most of the site's visitors are from the States. I suppose my strategy is so bad it's 'Elasticated Pants.'
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