WHO
IS...
®
by
Marv Wolfman & Shawn McManus
Even
FRANKENSTEIN wanted to be human!
THE
DATE: The day after tomorrow.
THE
PLACE: The City Of Bedlam.
A
silent, powerful figure appears in the City. His mission: to hunt
down and neutralize the ten crime families who control Bedlam.
The Full-Circle mobs try to destroy him but nothing stops him.
On his belt buckle is a raised design: AX. The newspapers
name him AX. It is only later that AX discovers
the 'X' in his name is not a letter but the roman numeral for ten.
He is ATEN.
But
the tenth--what?
Nobody
knows who he is or where he came from.
NOT
EVEN AX HIMSELF!

An
'animated' look at ATen
THE
MAN CALLED AX Book One was conceived of as a six-issue mini-series
and was published by BRAVURA, a division of MALIBU comics, in 1994
and 1995. Within months, however, Marvel Comics bought the company
and soon canceled all the Malibu and Bravura books. Artist Shawn McManus
and I then published the eight issues of Book Two at DC Comics.
AX
was designed to operate on several levels. On the surface it was
a high testosterone series with nonstop action, but look beneath
that top layer and you'll see the story of a man and a woman both
searching for their identities; AX has no idea who he is
or how he became an almost unstoppable monster. Reporter Liz Watkins,
divorced, estranged from her son, is trying to find out what has
happened to her life ever since she returned from the Gulf War.
The
Man Called AX is a different kind of action star. His ongoing
search for his own identity makes him a vulnerable, sympathetic hero.
The stories in The Man Called AX are not just about AX's
fight with the super-powered forces that oppose him, but about a warrior
trying to find himself. AX is an incredibly powerful figure.

His
cyborg abilities don't make him invulnerable, but he possesses a healing
factor which allows him to automatically repair his body when damaged.
He can heal over wounds or regrow a demolished arm. However,
the worse the damage the longer it takes to repair it, putting AX
in even more danger. AX is armed with all manner of futuristic
weapons, but the greatest weapon in his arsenal is AX himself:
Super-strong, impossibly-fast, powerful beyond belief, incredibly
agile, The Man Called AX pursues his enemies with relentless
determination...........................................................................................................................................
The
Man Called AX is not alone in his fight. Joining him
is Bedlam reporter Liz Watkins. Liz was a Marine vet trained
in Desert Storm and the sole survivor of a disastrous helicopter crash.
She aids AX in his effort to rid Bedlam of the criminal forces
which control it. Liz knows her ties with AX go back to
the War and that he was one of the soldiers aboard her helicopter
before its deadly crash destroyed the sanity that was her life.
Liz,
divorced, searches for her future even as AX is desperate to
find his past. More than a dozen Marines vanished that dark, deadly
night, but only Liz Watkins was found. The other bodies were
brought to a laboratory hidden under Mercy Island in the City of Bedlam.
Once there these soldiers, as well as many other victims, were experimented
on and converted into Human-Cyborg Warriors. The AX symbol
on his belt is actually not a name but the designation for ASSASSINTEN
AX is the tenth model in a line of high-tech warriors created
by an unknown group for the purpose of taking over the world. When
AX rebels against his programming and seeks out THE CADRE, the
group that turned him into a Killing Machine, they unleash A-models
one through nine to find and destroy their renegade warrior.
Not
only does The Man Called AX have to worry about Bedlam's
crime families, but also an army of cyborg warriors, each as deadly
as AX himself. If he fails to survive, AX will never learn
his true identity or see his family again. The Man Called AX
was created not only to be a very powerful character-driven story
(after all, it is about a man in search of his own identity and humanity)
but it was also created to let Shawn and me do high-action stories
like we've never been able to do before.
In
the first issue of AX, Book One, I mentioned I was inspired
by the great Hong Kong movies of John Woo and Jackie Chan. At
that time both director and actor were known only to a very few
of us HK movie aficionados. Now, Chan and Woo have both
become major leaguers here, with Woo's Face/Off
and Mission: Impossible 2 breaking all records, and Chan's
Shanghai Knights and Rush Hour 1 & 2 doing big
box-office numbers.
We've
tried to bring the high-intensity of Woo and Chan to the comic
book page while creating a complex set of characters in a rich
and textured city. Since we believe action speaks louder
than words, we've also tried to bring out our characters through
the action rather than simply stop the story for a big fight scene
as most comics today do. AX may sometimes appear to
be another high-estosterone comic, but unless we're all fooling
ourselves, we believe it is something much more.
Intensely
personal and emotional, THE MAN CALLED AX is one of my favorite
creations.
After
the Man Called AX was cancelled (victim of the bad sales of
all comics in the mid-1990s) I wrote a TV pilot script called A-Ten
which turned AX into a female version. If you're interested
in seeing the AX that never was,
Click Here for The Woman Called
AX.
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