Stuff I Read – Ghost Rider Danny Ketch Classic vol 1
This series really surprised me. I’ve been reading the Essential Ghost Rider volumes for a while now, and have read all of the newer Ghost Rider series, but this one catches me as being drastically different from the first Ghost Rider series and much more in tune with the darker and moodier stories of the second series. First off, the Ghost Rider persona is truly a persona, and Dan Ketch has very little control over the monster within. Also, unlike Johnny who got tricked into becoming the Ghost Rider through some weird logic with making deals with the devil, Dan chooses to become the Ghost Rider. To Dan it is like a drug, an addiction that he cannot get rid of. He feels good punishing evil. The series tackles this directly, and Dan even tries to claim that it doesn’t matter if Ghost Rider does good out of a want to do good or out of a want for vengeance. Because, obviously, being the spirit of vengeance is what Ghost Rider is about, and often there is little heroic about him. He doesn’t forgive and he doesn’t let anyone off easy.
Surprising to me after all of the much tamer materials of the first Ghost Rider is that with these there is much more violence and killing. The new hook is that Ghost Rider appears when innocent blood is spilled, and that is often. His first arc takes him against Deathwatch and Blackout, and he wins but disfigures Blackout. And in a very dark move, Blackout then goes about murdering people close to Dan, starting with his sister. Yes, is a quite daring move, given how most mainstream comics are, Dan’s sister is murdered while in a coma. This of course does things to Dan, pushing him to want more control when Ghost Rider, but it also shows that these are villains that are serious. Blackout then starts killing around Dan. A newsstand owner he knows, his priest, some random person he passes. It is that dark reflection of vengeance, where Ghost Rider is put up as the heroic avenger and Blackheart as the cruel, sadistic one. But Ghost Rider gets his hands dirty plenty, and from mugger to rapist normally leaves them a gibbering mass of insanity.
This makes for quite the good read, but there are a few nagging things about the series that are getting to me. One is that people should know about Ghost Rider. He was around for a while and even on a superteam, though it was the Champions. Even Iceman, who was on that same team, doesn’t seem to know who Ghost Rider is. That makes this all a little sketchy, because Ghost Rider’s portrayal in the media is a plot thread, and I find it more odd that no one in the media would put the whole “flaming headed motorcyclist who might fight crime” puzzle together. Or you’d think that Dan might have wanted to do some research into what he is turning into and might seek more information about the Ghost Rider. But no. It is all just accepted and ignored. And while that bothers me a bit, it does not change the fact that these are some damn good issues. The art and writing fit with feel of the stories, and with Dan you get the feeling that he isn’t a hero. Not just because he doesn’t have control of Ghost Rider but because it takes so long for him to want control.
The series really is about Dan and his coming to terms with what Ghost Rider is and means. It is his addiction, and his choice to keep going back to the Ghost Rider. But even after his sister’s murder and his life kind of hitting the shits, he keeps going back. And seeing that super-powers as an addiction in a protagonist is rather interesting. I mean, I know where it leads him eventually, as that is covered in Ghost Rider: Danny Ketch, but there is still the rest of the second series of Ghost Rider to get through, and if this volume is any indication it is a good series. I give the first volume an 8/10.