Summer of Sleepwalker Week Three
And now, a lot of information about Sleepwalker issues 11 through 15.
The lives of Rick and Sleepwalker just continue to be made worse by their situation. It turns out that Sleepy can get high off a special frequency of light and in the four-part story “Color Blindness” (only the first three parts of which are in the batch I just read) he becomes addicted to it, craving it so much that he fights his way into the physical world to get it while Rick was awake, leaving Rick comatose. SW hates what he did, but I’m only 75% of the way through the story about addiction, so I doubt that guilt will be enough to get him over it easily. One other thing we learn about Sleepwalker is that back in the Mindscape there is a female-presenting one of his kind that he calls his beloved, making his separation from his home realm even worse.
As for Rick, he’s been getting a free apartment to live in because he does repairs and chores in the building, but this situation is precarious as best and has been complicated by how much sleep he needs to get (or is forced to get while Sleepy is addicted). It occurred to me that if he’d been smart he would definitely leave notes for Sleepwalker asking him to warpbeam up some repairs around the building. It’d solve a lot of Rick’s problems. When he gets knocked into a coma his ex-girlfriend Alyssa visits and begins to feel more warmly toward him. Maybe it’ll pay off in the long-run (though not in the long-long run since I know that they aren’t still together in the appearances Rick has made in relatively recent comics). And I doubt the landlords are gonna love that he’s now in a coma, doing nothing around the building.
Speaking of Alyssa, she doesn’t get much to do here. She’s been dating a rich jerk named Whitney (who has been around since the Bookworm issue but I’ve always assumed wasn’t going to show up again so I don’t think I’ve ever mentioned him) but now she is fed up with his jerkishness, which will help if she does wind up going back to Rick.
We’ve also been getting to know “Ricky” who is the inner child of Rick Sheridan that embodies his spirit of adventure and such and exists in his mind. He’s been hanging out with Sleepwalker during Rick’s waking hours, mostly for exposition and stuff, but he has begun to take a more active role, helping defend Rick’s mind from invaders.
Joining our supporting cast in the “Color Blindness” story is a scientist introduced in a splash that made him look like a mad scientist out of post-Golden Age horror comics (I’ve brought up that era of horror comics every week and do believe there are intentional callbacks to it). This guy is Charles Warren Fong and I’ve liked him so far, but I worry he may not make it through that last issue of “Color Blindness”. The thing about Fong is that he occasionally goes by “CW” and has a blonde woman as an assistant who winds up betraying him, all of which were also true about the villain Crimewave. That is a very specific set of things to be true about two different characters appearing within the span of a year in the same comic.
Villains? Well, we don’t get any returns of Cobweb, 8-Ball, or the Chain Gang yet. The first issue of this batch concludes the story that Sleepwalker captured by destructive government agents called the Office of Insufficient Evidence, led by Tolliver Smith. While Sleepwalker escapes easily enough when a guest star arrives, Smith continues his quest to bring in our hero. Only a few issues later, when his superiors in Washington tell him he needs to be more covert, he brings in the OIE’s special force, Thought Police. This group is made up of individuals called Wiretap, Cuffs, and Nightstick, just in case you were wondering if OIE remains a parody of police excess.
During the “Color Blindness” story we get another new villain. She is Selena Slate, the lab assistant that betrayed Fong. Naturally, a lab accident grants her power over the magical light they’ve been studying, with different colours doing different things (blue can freeze stuff, red can heat stuff, I think purple makes holograms, that sort of thing) and she has access to that shade to which Sleepy is addicted. She immediately took to calling herself Spectra, Mistress of Light as if she’d been waiting for the chance to do so anyway. Since I’ve left it mid-story, I assume she’d yet to play her part in full.
This batch also has a face-off against Nightmare, a Marvel mainstay villain who needed to show up in this book given his role as the boss of bad dreams. He rolls in with a plot to help Sleepwalker back to the Mindscape, but with the intent to torture Rick once he’s gone, knowing SW would hate that. This would have been his first chance to cause distress to one of Sleepwalker’s people, because they don’t sleep and he’s never been able to give them nightmares. Anyway, Sleepwalker obviously turns down the chance to get home to save his human host and Nightmare seems to say “Oh okay” and then not bother with continuing his plans.
Then there’s the guest stars. It’s Ghost Rider that saves SW from the OIE (after a misunderstanding fight, of course). The thing that got me to start my Summer of Sleepwalker was a discussion I had about Ghost Rider and the other Midnight Sons books. I was a big fan of that line as a child, though I can recognize now that they were largely not very good, so I began to daydream about a supernatural horror-themed Marvel Comics line that could have been better. I included Sleepwalker in my imaginary line. based the memories I had of reading the book as a kid, and had hopes that Ghost Rider’s appearance here would display some kind of chemistry between the characters to prove my instincts correct. It didn’t. There was nothing particularly interesting in this Ghost Rider appearance.
And finally we have Reed Richards, who is recruited by the OIE during Color Blindness because he is “the world’s leading expert in cross-dimensional travel” and they want to get into the Mindscape to get Sleepwalker. Reed clearly doesn’t trust them, so he makes Smith stay behind while he goes in with the Thought Police. It’s the kind of thing I like to see the Fantastic Four used for, being brought in as experts when something weird is going on. I have to assume they will also be against the OIE in the last part of “Color Blindness”. And for the record, Ben Grimm also does get to appear here, in a sort of Greek chorus role on the sidelines staying back at HQ with Smith.
So that’s it for characters and ongoing plots. It’s probably just because “Color Blindness” made up 60% of that run and the ongoing OIE plot was in the other issues, but it does feel like the era of self-contained issues may be at an end, but hopefully we will still have some, because that is where I feel the book is at its strongest. So far, I’d say the stories have remained relatively good, simple superhero tales with a supernatural bet. And there hasn’t been much of the the sort of “mysteries” added just to be mysterious and then never followed up on later that I associate with similar books in the era. So far, I still like Sleepwalker.



