Andrew Roller Presents
C O M I C  U P D A T E
FREE!    Internet Edition    May 18, 1995

THE COMIC UPDATE ARCHIVES
by Andrew Roller

From:  COMIC UPDATE #3, August 25, 1986

Guidelines for Researchers:  I have dispensed with the Ògrading system.Ó  
Where the current address of the artist is known, I have published it.

Slam Bang #5, $1.25.  Digest.  Hutchinson Bros. and Allen Freeman.
         Headline:  SON OF MAD
         Story Preview:  Anthology of wry, humorous stories.  The last days 
of the dinosaurs are detailed in ÒA Dinosaur Legend!Ó  A monkey grinderÕs 
chimp gets thrown in jail in ÒThe Monkey Business.Ó A hippy coma patient 
wakes up and moves in with a medical intern in ÒItÕs A Groovy World.Ó  A 
cannibal orphan gets adopted in ÒCarnivorous Habits.Ó 
         Story Critique:  ÒDinosaur LegendÓ simulates Pierre BoulleÕs novel, 
ÒPlanet of the Apes.Ó  ÒMonkey BusinessÓ is hilarious but dies with an old 
joke at the end.  ÒGroovy WorldÓ and ÒCarnivorous HabitsÓ are flawless.
         Art:  Mainstream MAD magazine art in all the stories except 
ÒDinosaur Legend,Ó which is not stamp art but looks like it.
         Special Features:  Wraparound mailer sports a flawless eight panel 
story about life as a wraparound mailer plus [many other special features.  
Ed.]
         Subjective Opinion:  Excellent buy.  Best small press magazine I have 
ever read.
         1995 Commentary:  One of the great mysteries of the small press (to 
me, anyway) is, ÒWhat ever happened to the Hutchinson Brothers and Allen 
Freeman?Ó  They seemed to have an excellent, highly acclaimed ÒcompanyÓ 
going when I joined the small press.  Yet, by about 1987, they were utterly 
and completely gone from the small press scene.  Other than Matt Feazell, 
they were probably the most professional artists in the genre.  

Captain Optimist #1, $1.25.  Digest.  T.M. Maple and Allen Freeman, Fan-
Atic Press.
         Headline:  CAPTAIN OPTIMIST, 150 Copies Printed
         Story Preview:  Can Captain Optimist save the world from nuclear 
destruction when President Reagan has a down day and decides to Òpush 
the button?Ó
         Story Critique:  Story is loaded with hype in a satire of the John 
Byrne style.  Be prepared for a lot of wordy reading!
         Special Features:  Editorial explains how Captain Optimist was 
created (as an antidote to CYNICALMAN), mentions and gives addresses for 
Matt Feazell, The CollectorsÕ Club.  Beautiful one page Captain Optimist 
pin-up.  Back cover ad for Captain Optimist No. 2 and Captain Optimist 
dayglow button.
         Subjective Opinion:  Unique character.  Excellent buy.
         1995 Commentary:  As I sit here now looking at Captain Optimist 
once again, it occurs to me that this is probably THE character that all 
comics collectors are consciously (or unconsciously) looking for.  
         First of all, let me define Òcomics collectors.Ó  What I DONÕT mean 
by that are the average boys who pass on through, reading all kinds of 
comics, perhaps even morbid or insane science fiction comics.  Nor do I 
mean those who are into creating their own strange or bizarre comics 
today.  
         What I mean by Òcomics collectorsÓ is the hard core dudes.  The ones 
who have every issue of X-MEN and who stay up late watching Dr. Who on 
Saturday nights.  You know, guys with beards, small brains and big bellies.  
Now these sort of fellows would be perfectly delighted with Captain 
Optimist.  This hero wears rose colored glasses--all the time.  He flies 
around looking for all thatÕs good in the world.  Except for jibes against 
conservative Republicans, youÕll never find anything in this comic of a 
satirical or ironic nature.  No, there is no hypocrisy in America in Captain 
Optimist.  If we would all just fly around in our underpants looking for the 
good in everyone, everything would be fine!  Captain Optimist is sort of a 
retreat from reality.  It works as long as you never leave...your closet.  The 
minute you walk out, of course, youÕre confronted with the reality of the 
world, which (even in America) is much more temperamentally like Bosnia 
than like Ossie and Harriet.  But there is a hard-core gang of comics 
collectors who yearn for the world to be like Captain Optimist, and it is 
my opinion that somebody could make some nice pocket change for himself 
peddling this kind of character in 1995.
         As for the creators of Captain Optimist, I have no idea what 
happened to them.  Like the Hutchinson Brothers, they disappeared around 
1987, never to be seen again.  Perhaps they are with Elvis in a flying 
saucer somewhere, exploring the good side of Jupiter.

The Funny Files #1, $1.39.  8 1/2Ó x 11Ó.  By Andrew Eng and Bob Supina.
         Headline:  STEPSON OF MAD
         Story Preview:  Anthology of wry, humorous stories and vignettes.  
ÒArtieÓ gets into trouble when he draws details of PicassoÕs paintings on 
his employerÕs ice cream cakes.  ÒSpring breakÓ collegiates are 
enlightened in Florida.  ÒSubway Survival Tips.Ó  ÒMall DoctorÓ treats acne 
on Valley Girl cruisers.  ÒSecret Agent A-10Ó risks losing her clothing 
when she embarks on a dangerous mission.  ÒHonko, Clown For Hire,Ó 
attempts to cheer a child.  RAMBO takeoff featuring ÒJersey ShoreÓ eatery 
class.
         Stroy Critique:  ÒArtieÓ is flawless.  ÒSpring BreakÓ is flawless but 
boring.  ÒSubway SurvivalÓ is flawless.  ÒMall DoctorÓ is flawless.  
ÒSecret Agent A-10Ó is flawless but boring.  It features traditional 
stereotyped portrayals of women and homosexuals.  ÒHonkoÓ is flawless.  
ÒJersey ShoreÓ is slightly flawed but excellent fun.
         Art:  Excellent.  Some stories, like ÒSecret Agent A-10,Ó are perfect, 
others are quite good.  ÒSecret Agent A-10Ó is a real doll, a must buy for 
collectors of blonde, blue-eyed good girl art.
         Lettering:  Excellent.  Some is even like Walt KellyÕs George Ward.
         Special Features:  One-panel gag on back cover, a satire of the lyrics 
to John Cougar MellencampÕs ÒJack and DianeÓ pop song.
         1995 Commentary:  Another collection of outstanding artists and 
writers who have disappeared into the void.  

EDITORIAL, On MINI-COMIC UPDATE (pg. 4):  Hi!  Believe it or not, six 
months ago I had no idea mini-comics existed.  I was struggling to sell my 
comics, and took out a (very expensive) half page ad in THE COMICS 
BUYERSÕ GUIDE.
         Guess who saw my ad and mailed me a free comic?  Of course!  Matt 
Feazell!  Guess what I did?  I read it and then threw it away!  (IÕve since 
bought another copy.)
         Matt wrote Ònetwork accessÓ beside Tim Corrigan and Clay GeerdesÕ 
addresses (publishers of the fanzines, SMALL PRESS COMICS EXPLOSION 
(SPCE), and COMIX WAVE (CW), respectively) and I subscribed to both at 
once.
         I was disappointed by the clutter and diminutive space allocations in 
SPCE, and later got kicked out.  CW, on the other hand, despite ClayÕs 
excellent editorials, provided little more than one line plugs for minis.
         On July 1 Tim announced in SPCE No. 6 that SPCE was dropping to a 
quarterly schedule.  I had planned to devote my whole summer to expanding 
my comic company; but now, with SPCE going into hibernation, it looked 
like I would have to close down too.
         Shortly thereafter a very rude letter from Tim appeared in my 
mailbox, and I was curtly informed that, due to my (innocent) attempt to 
advertise THE GAY ADVENTURER in SPCE No. seven I, and the ÒcrapÓ and 
ÒhorseshitÓ that I published, was ÒoutÓ of SPCE.
         I at once dropped everything and began working on MINI-COMIC 
UPDATE, reviewing minis I had bought second-hand from Matt.
         And here we are!  IÕm still hesitant about reviewing other peopleÕs 
hard work, and some have criticized me for being too harsh.  IÕve made 
some mistakes, too, like my ratings on SNOWBUNIÕs story and art in MINI-
COMIC UPDATE No. 2 (too low).  But MINI-COMIC UPDATE is loads of fun (at 
least for me!) and I hope to keep it up for years to come (unless I get 
elected president in Ô88!)  Modestly yours, Andrew Roller
         1995 Commentary:  Some of you may remember Tim CorriganÕs SPCE, 
which was briefly sold by real comic book distributors and stocked in real 
comic book stores.  There was a black and white independent comic book 
explosion going on at the time, fueled largely by the popularity of the 
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.  (At that time a brand new comic book on 
the Òcutting edge,Ó not some tired over-commercialized crap for 5-year-
old boys.)  The B/W explosion, like TimÕs reviewzine of the same name, 
was totally over by early 1987.  Tim and the other B/W comics makers 
slowly (or quickly) went bankrupt and faded away.  However, Tim 
CorriganÕs work is still talked about to this day and seen as a Òturning 
pointÓ in the small press, a kind of lodestone by which small press history 
can be marked out.
         Oh, yeah.  Not enough people wrote in my name for president in 1988 
so instead we got that stellar leader...George Bush!
         A final note:  for the first three issues MINI-COMIC UPDATE was the 
name of what I published, but people kept sending me digest-sized comics 
and whatnot so with issue number four I changed the name to COMIC 
UPDATE.

Floyd Flamdoozle (Unnumbered), 25¢ + stamp.  Mini.  By Allen Freeman and 
Chuck Bunker.
         Story Preview:  Floyd Flamdoozle, mini-comic character, refuses to 
work for Fan-Atic press.
         Story Critique:  Choppy but excellent.  I have, however, seen this 
Òcharacter comes to lifeÓ sort of thing many times.
         Subjective Opinion:  Good buy.  Excellent buy for any who wish to see 
the Dark Horse, High School, APC, Psuedo [sic] and Fan-Atic small press 
publishers caricatured.
         1995 Commentary:  It is funny listing those names of publishers, 
because many of them had disappeared from the small press by the time I 
wrote that review, and that was a review of a ÒnewÓ comic at the time.  
ÒHigh School,Ó ÒAPC,Ó ÒDark Horse,Ó all were ending their careers in small 
press by the time I got into it.  ÒHigh SchoolÓ and ÒAPCÓ were part of the 
New Wave era of small press, which ended with the beginning of Tim 
CorriganÕs SPCE.

Ratman, The Dark Snipe #1, 25¢.  Mini.  Randy Crawford.
         Headline:  DARK TRIPE
         Story Preview:  The death of Spruce PayneÕs parents spurs him to 
combat trivial crimes.
         Story Critique:  Good.  Weightlifting sequence lacks spontaneity.  
Payne resolves to fight traffic violators when his parents get run over by 
a truck, yet as Ratman, he nearly runs over people himself!  Other scenes 
are too heavy handed:  it is not enough for publisher Randy Crawford that 
Ratman beat up a man for littering: Crawford swathes the character in 
bandages and places him in a wheelchair (BEFORE his encounter with 
Ratman).
         Story Complete?  No. The police have spotted Ratman and are about 
to pursue when the comic ends.
         Art:  Excellent.
         Subjective Opinion:  Excellent buy.  Why do talented writers/artists 
insist on mucking about with another companiesÕ copyrighted characters?  
Frank MillerÕs DARK KNIGHT is itself a sort of parody of BATMAN, parodies 
of parodies appear almost pointless.
         1995 Commentary:  DonÕt confuse this Randy Crawford, now long 
gone from the small press, with Randy H. Crawford, a popular member of 
the small press today who makes adult comics.

C O M I C  U P D A T E  S T O R I E S
The Fading Universe
Part Seven
by Andrew Roller 

Chapter Three

The department store shuddered as artillery bombarded the mall.  
Marvin and Elsa exchanged anxious glances, their hands slipping into 
each other's palms.
         "We're under attack," the Lieutenant, suddenly appearing, shouted 
to the prisoners.  "I suggest you take cover!"
         "Must be the city cops," Marvin said to Elsa as he pulled her 
underneath a table.
         "Just so it's not the Leathernecks," she breathed.
         "Or the mutants," Marvin added.  Or one of a hundred other groups 
inside the sprawling city that would find quick work for any cache of 
arms that they happened upon.
         Suddenly the ceiling above them collapsed in a shower of cement 
boulders and broken plaster.
         "You O.K.?" Marvin asked Elsa as a snow of alabaster dust drifted 
down upon them.
         "Yeah."  She coughed.
         Marvin crawled out from underneath the table.
         "All I asked for was a refund," Perry quipped when he saw him.
         Marvin spotted Flaherty's feet sticking out from underneath a 
rack of women's dresses.
         "Marvin?  Are you still there, Marvin?" the fat boy's voice 
quavered.
         Harrigan appeared, dressed in a see-through nightie, with a 
flowered corselet around his thigh.
         "Pull your pants on," Marvin told Harrigan.  "And get Frankie."

C O M I C  U P D A T E  N E W S

CORRIGAN REVEALED!
Openly Queer, He Leads Update Into its Tenth Year

         Interviewer (I):  You have been quietly putting out Comic Update 
for several years now, yet nobody knows who you are.  You review 
others, yet yourself go unreviewed.  Isn't it time the public got to know 
you?
         Corrigan (C):  Well, I'm a very private person.  
         I:  Still, a few words wouldn't hurt, would they?
         C:  (after stalling)  Okay.  When I was 32 I was in a terrible 
marriage.  I was unwilling to admit to myself that I was gay.  Finally 
one night I packed up my secret collection of BlueBoy and Mandate, 
picked up my cat, and climbed out the bedroom window.  I've never 
looked back.  The wife got everything else, and she can keep it.  I 
believe she's now happily married to a prosecutor or something, in 
Florida.  Fortunately there were no children from the marriage.
         I:  How about your relationship with Roller?  Is he a pervert, your 
ex-gay lover...
         C:  (interrupting)  He masturbates.  That is the main problem.  He 
even unplugs his phone so nobody can interrupt his masturbating.  Once 
he told me he was trying to get into the Guiness Book of World 
Records.
         I:  How about Dockery?  What is your relationship with him?
         C:  I pick up his mail for him.  I hand over his bills and shit, and 
keep the small press stuff.  Then I take it over to [P.D.] Wilson's and 
review it and type it all up.  Then this alcoholic jailbird wife-beaten 
(note I didn't say "beater", but "beaten") Jones guy runs off the Update 
at a local copy shop.  I think he gets someone there to do it when the 
management isn't looking, but I don't ask.  It goes from me to Jones to 
the copy shop, then Jones shows up with a stack of the shit and I have 
to begin the thankless task of folding, cutting, and stapling.  It takes 
me hours, and yet people say "I won't deal with Update because it's put 
out by that Andrew Roller guy."  Thanks, folks.  My numb, stapler-bitten 
hands are a testament to how false that statement is.
         I:  How did you get in with Roller, anyway?
         C:  Through Liam Brooks.  He led Lydia astray, and me too.  He 
came up with this Fugitive Factsheet idea.  Roller got credit as co-
founder, I wrote reviews, and Liam ran them off at a copy shop in 
Texas.  I could never get him to mail me enough copies to distribute in 
Atlanta, though, and eventually he killed the magazine.  That left, you 
guessed it, me and Roller.  So naturally Roller was looking for someone 
to do his Update, and I still had a shitload of unpublished reviews.  
Then I made the Jones connection, got a key to Dockery's mailbox, and 
the rest is history.  I even have the good fortune of being related (by 
name, anyway) to the esteemed Tim Corrigan of SPCE fame.
         I:  You have been distributing Comic Update for years now in 
Columbus and, especially, Atlanta.
         C:  Since at least 1991.  It started with Fugitive Factsheet, of 
course.  I've also run for political office in Atlanta, and Update printed 
some of my campaign ads.  I ran as the openly gay candidate, of course.
         I:  Are you HIV-positive?
         C:  That's an offensive question.
         I:  It's offensive to be HIV-positive?
         C:  No, the way you put it.  Coming right after I said I'd proudly run 
as a gay candidate.
         I:  Sorry.  We'll skip it, then.  Tell me where you distribute your 
books, I mean, Comic Update.
         C:  Comic Update, our newly renamed poetry title Dreamgirls 
with Shaman, and, occasionally, that heterosexual filth that Roller 
foists on me, Naughty Naked Dreamgirls (NND).  NND does not get 
distributed with Update and Shaman, however, I assure you of that.  I 
dump NND off at the Museum of Acting and Cinematic Arts in 
Columbus, where you will never find Orson Welles but you will always 
find the latest Savannah.
         I:  Which is located where in Columbus, not that I care?
         C:  MACA, as it is called, is on Victory Drive in Columbus.
         I:  How do you spell Victory?
         C:  Not that you care, of course...
         I:  Well, tell me where you distribute Update and Shaman, then, 
the "Atlanta Distribution Points", as it were.
         C:  Oxford II on Peachtree Road, Fantasyland, Oxford on Pharr 
Road, Criminal Records in Little Five Points, Book Nook on Buford 
Highway, Oxford Comics, Wax N' Fax, Tower Books in Atlanta, Blue Moon 
Records, and Wuxtry's Records in Atlanta.  This Wuxtry's it is 
interesting.  There is an Athens, Georgia branch of Wuxtry's where an 
REM band member once worked.  REM got their start there (as a musical 
group), also the B-52's, and many other great punk bands. 
         I:  So all of these stores have Update and Shaman available all 
the time?
         C:  I stock them basically in the order they are listed.  If I run out 
of copies, I run out of copies.  Jones frequently does not run as many 
copies as I could distribute.  He is sort of a lazy bum.  Also, 
Fantasyland closes early, so I skip it if it's already closed.  But I 
diligently stock all these places, in the order listed, on a regular basis.  
Some places Update and Shaman are free, other places charge money.  
But the books go right out the door.  Somebody is picking them up, one 
by one, and reading them.  I've even followed a person out, watched him 
read Update and throw it in the trash, and gone over and fished the 
issue out of the trash can and re-stocked it.  I call it recycling (laughs).
         I:  Did you ever distribute Roller's notorious book, Chester?
         C:  Good God!  Don't even mention that one!  I dumped the whole lot 
of them in a bin at a Columbus comix store.  When I went back the next 
day, the manager (or someone) had thrown them out.  Good riddance!
         I:  What is Lynn Hansen's relationship with Update?
         C:  I don't know.  He moved back to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and took 
up again with all his gay pals there.  Don't send anything to that Boise, 
Idaho address listed on the Update business cards.  He's not there any 
more.  Basically he is out of the picture.  I am now Update's 
representative to the gay community.
         I:  Well, I can't think of anything much else to say.  I'm new at 
this.
         C:  You're good at asking annoying questions.  You'll go far.  Maybe 
Roller will hire you and you can go interview Ian Shires or somebody.
         (tape ends)

R E A D E R   E - M A I L

ÒThe comics people want you to buy good paper comics so they can charge 
over 2 bucks a copy whether you care about good paper or not,Ó writes 
findline@ix.netcom.com (Ben Ohmart).

N O T I C E :  There was no May 17th Comic Update.  (I had to go to the 
bathroom.)  

ROLLER PUBLICATIONS  Free for a greeting-card SASE (or $1.00) from:  
Jim Corrigan, P.O. Box 3663, Phenix City, AL 36868.  COMIC UPDATE 
(Library of Congress ISSN: 0894-5195): small press comix.  NAUGHTY 
NAKED DREAMGIRLS (Library of Congress ISSN: 1070-1427): sex stories.  
(Include an age statement-18 or over.)  DREAMGIRLS WITH SHAMAN: 
poetry.  END OF TRANSMISSION

Subj:  Comic Update May 18, 1995 Allen Freeman, Corrigan Revealed!