Summer of Sleepwalker Week Four
This time I’m looking at Sleepwalker issues 16 to 19, with the Sleepwalker Holiday Special thrown in there too.
This batch of stories begins with the conclusion of the “Color Blindness” arc, in which Sleepwalker became addicted to a frequency of light and then hurt Rick by bursting out of his head. Overall, “Color Blindness” doesn’t hold together as a four-part story, it’s more like two two-parters. The first two issues had the addiction and the new supervillain Spectra, and the latter two were about the Thought Police and Reed Richards going into Rick’s mind. Spectra doesn’t show up in the latter half and Sleepwalker is able to kick the addiction with ease just because he feels bad about what happened to Rick. It is worth noting that during the fight with the Thought Police inside his own mind, Rick gets to sort of lucid dream at them, so he gets a more active role in battling supervillains than he usually does.
Issue 17 is a crossover with fellow ’90s hero Darkhawk. Unlike the previous times Sleepy has been visited by other Marvel characters, this story is a direct continuation of something that happened in another book, so one can not get the whole story here. While I refuse to read anything else for context during this, my Summer of Sleepwalker, I have read the Darkhawk issue before (I own a complete run of Darkhawk that I’ve kept even to this day) and honestly, this issue gives enough information to catch up. The baddies here are an iteration of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants with Toad in charge. Their plan involves kidnapping the mutant Portal (an underused character I like) and also Spider-Man is there. It’s not really relevant to Sleepwalker beyond Toad trying to connect with Sleepy by pointing out that he is hated by society, just like the mutants are.
After that we have an Infinity War tie-in. I had assumed I’d read all of this book in my youth, but nothing was familiar here. But maybe that has something to do with how forgettable it was. As a result of whatever is going on in Infinity War, most of the population of Earth are in a trance (including Rick, so once again Sleepy is free to do the crossover). Some psychic good guys (Professor X, Jean Grey, Psylocke, and Moondragon) ask for Sleepwalker’s help. Since he’s a being from the Mindscape they could use him as a sort of amplifier for their mental powers and help all the entranced masses. He agrees to do it, but not until after a fight against evil doppelgangers of a truly arbitrary collection of superheroes (Firestar, Daredevil, and Beast). It may not be much of anything, but the issue is a self-contained story even as it is part of this larger crossover. It’s a single battle in a larger war, it just means very little to Sleepwalker’s own book.
The Holiday Special is two self-contained stories from other creative teams that both feel like they could have come from those old horror comics I keep bringing up. In one, Sleepy tangles with a wish-granting genie that resides not in a lamp but in a credit card (oh, the commentary on our society). In the end, Sleepwalker wins, though the cursed card finds a new victim almost immediately. The second story has Sleepwalker trying to catch some art thieves, but Rick has indigestion and keeps waking up. Without enough time to defeat the crooks, Sleepwalker poses as the ghost of the security guard the criminals killed, swearing he will keep coming back for revenge unless they surrender to the authorities, which they do. Imagine their surprise when it turns out that Sleepwalker had actually got that guard to the hospital and he had not even died. I do believe that this special is the only story in this set that does not contain any characters crossing in from the rest of the Marvel Universe.
Issue 19 is the first of a multi-part story (I had to look ahead to see how long, and it is six issues) called “Mindfield”. This story brings back not one, not two, but six previous villains. Granted, four of those are the Chain Gang. When last we saw them, they were stranded in the Mindscape and there they have been discovered by Sleepwalker’s mysterious arch-nemesis Cobweb. Cobweb’s plan? To send them back to Earth to kill Rick and Sleepwalker. And since the only way they know to do that is by going through the mind of a sleeping physical being, they have to do it that way. The being in question? Rick’s dog. Quite rude, Cobweb.
But before we can get to that, Sleepwalker has to deal with the other returning villain: 8-Ball. Like Sleepwalker himself, 8-Ball is being drawn more muscular now and it doesn’t look good. His cool big 8-Ball helmet doesn’t look as cool or big on a muscular form. It kinda makes 8-Ball look, if you can believe it, goofy. But he’s still up to some classic supervillain stuff here. Riding around on a giant 8-Ball and robbing a pool contest with a golden trophy. And when he’s just knocking civilians at Sleepwalker with his jet-propelled cue I can’t help but love this guy. In no way does he fit the horror-tinged, would-be-cerebral nature of the book, but he’s the platonic ideal of the kind of supervillain he is. Incredibly fun.
Anyway, Sleepwalker insists that Rick should be able to just close his eyes and focus to project Sleepy into the world, instead of having to be asleep. And so, when Rick is attacked by the Chain Gang he tries this technique and ends up melded with Sleepwalker. Like, half Sleepwalker, half Rick. That’s our cliffhanger this week.
What about our supporting cast? Well, Rick is still pining for his ex Alyssa (who is still with rich jerk Whitney), but also he meets Janine, a mysterious new woman for him to have a love triangle about. Detective Perez, the cop I liked from a few weeks back, has made no more appearances, but Sleepwalker actually does consult Dr. Fong the mad scientist when he needs someone to un-hypnotize Portal.
Next week will be entirely made up of the “Mindfield” story, I guess. I hope it’s good.



