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Nerding Day: The Shield 🌭

Last month of this very year, Archie Comics published The Mighty Crusaders #1: The Shield. It was a lifeless reboot of a 60-year-old knockoff superhero team, which isn't as mean-spirited as it sounds since that describes most comics, but the reason we're talking about it is because it was written and illustrated by Rob Liefeld. And it may very well be the most Liefeldian thing ever made, which is absolutely as mean-spirited as it sounds.

If you're not familiar, Rob Liefeld was a comics illustrator from the '90s who could sort of draw a few human parts and nothing else. Everyone noticed this, talked about it, and hated it, but they just kept letting him do it and here we are. The Shield's second page shows a group of superheroes who look like they were mocked up this morning under the words "The Pinebrook Nazarene Youth Camp Super Duper Squad (Option Four)."

It's okay if you don't know the classic Archie heroes Flygirl, Captain Commando, Jaguar, Black Hood, Comet, Fox, and Lancelot Strong. They don't do anything in this issue other than stand here hiding their difficult-to-draw feet behind their (maybe) office's only furniture-- a rectangle drawn by a 4th grader learning how to draw shapes. One hallmark of Rob Liefeld's writing is that every character gets one small text box explaining which superhero archetype they are, no second part to this list, and then the comic gets cancelled.

Let's talk about superhero archetypes for a second. Comic writers have been using them as shorthand for decades, and we're fine with it. A character in a third party superhero world might run into a "clearly Batman guy" or "whatever their Fantastic Four is." We don't need to know everything about them; they're just there to establish the setting so the author can show us his unique take on the genre. Rob Liefeld doesn't do it like that. He thinks his idea of an 85th Captain America guy with no interesting twist totally rules. The Shield isn't even his first "exactly like Captain America guy." He was so good at drawing Captain America he produced a comic called Fighting American, who was a guy in a Captain America costume who carried a round shield.

The Fighting American had a team just barely not called The Avengers with a guy named Smash who turned into a giant monster when he got angry and a viking god of thunder who doth verily spaketh like this. You probably believe me, but I feel like I should make it clear I'm not kidding:

If you're wondering how they got away with this, they mostly didn't. They were sued and Fighting American was legally prohibited from throwing his shield which didn't matter because the company went bankrupt and Rob created another Captain America called Agent America which also didn't matter because lawyers told him to stop fucking making Captain Americas. Every entertainment industry blindly regurgitates the same idea over and over hoping it will work again, but it's rare to see this pathology in one specific person. Which brings us back to The Shield, the (at least) fourth Captain America Rob Liefeld illustrated.

The Shield is in his (maybe) apartment, sitting alone on his rectangle. A hot dog menu levitates? Rob Liefeld, without exaggeration, one of the biggest successes in modern art and he has remained incurious about how to draw any single thing in 30 years. This chair's existence is very much like if Richard Donner asked a makeup artist which side the camera things film from.

Because art is life, this world-famous illustrator drew The Shield watching a panel of himself from later in the comic on his TV. He lives in a cement box decorated with only a shape and a lamp, and yet even this was too much clutter for Rob to remember to draw the levitating hot dog menu.

Agents wearing the kind of shoulder pads Rob knows how to draw burst in through The Shield's open window and knobless door! Chunks from unrelated objects follow them in! They're here for his invincible armor and, wait did they say invincible armor, oh no, that explains why none of their weapons are going to work.

In stakes Rob Liefeld seems to think are high, these faceless agents from an organization we don't know harmlessly shoot the superhero for reasons not made clear. He barely has to move to beat them, which is good because Rob thinks he knows how a human arm connects to a torso at this one angle. He's wrong, but my main point is this isn't storytelling. It's something a bored nerd would look down at during Algebra class and not really remember drawing.

Rob seems to have lost track of shit himself. The Shield brags about how he is super duper like his suit, explains to the reader how no he's not, then headbutts and punches through everyone's helmets with what is clearly super duper strength. Maybe? We're not told what their hats are made of. They're not quite motorcycle or SWAT helmets-- they're more like what you'd draw if you were an untalented artist falling off a bridge and almost had time to draw one last human head. Anyway, over the course of five pages of low effort storyboards for a Ugandan kung fu movie, we are told and shown several contradictory things about our main character while learning nothing about anything. It's magnificent. If you showed this to the kindest comics editor in the world, they would say, "Tell the kid who drew this they should maybe be a fucking dentist."

This goddamn fight is still going. He punches one guy so hard they leave the confinement of his 3000 square foot cement box apartment and land on a Frank Miller spatter paint background. If you were to interpret this as real art, you'd say it was revealing something about a dark brutality within this hero. But it's not that. This art says nothing more than "I didn't know how to draw The Shield's love seat from the side."

Jesus Christ, he is still handing out this one-sided beating while he thinks the Wikipedia entry for The Shield to himself.

After maiming whoever these men were, he rides one of them out the window. It's not clear what floor he's on, but his building is a mid-century cement rectangle in the city's Gray Nothing District. There's something more amazing happening here, though. Rob Liefeld is known for his reluctance to draw feet, and it's almost genius how he managed to hide The Shield's feet three different times on a single page. He had to savagely murder one cop(?) to do it, but there it is-- a master at work.

It's not over! The Shield gets shot a few times by a Pictionary drawing that was going to be a helicopter, so he leaps up onto it. Which means, wait, mounted aircraft guns don't even jostle him? And they sent in eight(?) dudes in egg carton helmets to take him down with small arms? Holy shit, do I know more about helicopters than Rob Liefeld?

I'm being silly. Rob Liefeld knows parts of the helicopter I couldn't even conceive of. Like how The Shield is clinging to the helicopter's... I guess you'd call it its dorsal fin? Then he reaches into the windshield, pulls out its important wires, and raises them up above his head. I have no notes about raising your hands while you're on a moving helicopter's windshield and can't think of a single very specific thing Rob Liefeld is forgetting about helicopters.

You know what? This all seems weirdly familiar like I've seen it before. And not in the usual Rob Liefeld way. I mean a Captain America guy spending entire pages beating the fuck out of a room full of government(?) agents... that's from Civil War, the extremely popular Marvel comics event they based a billion dollar film on. Here, I'll show them side-by-side:

The similarities end there, though. It's not like in Civil War, Captain America jumped out the window and punched through the windshield of a helicopter. It was a jet.

Obviously I'm not accusing internationally known haver-of-original-ideas, Rob Liefeld, of plagiarism. There are still some major differences between these two sequences. For instance, The Shield was attacked in his apartment and Captain America wasn't. But wait, oh no, I just remembered Luke Cage's scene in Civil War.

Oh fuck, I think that rectangle graveyard might have even been Rob trying to draw Luke Cage's couch from a less interesting angle. So look, maybe it wasn't on purpose that Rob Liefeld did a shot-for-shot ripoff of one of the most well-known comic events of the last fifteen years. But whether he knew it or not, something inside him said, "Let's do exactly the thing everyone saw, only again, and worse in every way. Again."

Oh, this must have saved him a few minutes. The page after the helicopter crash is just a The Shield pin-up.

Since it's just a quick sketch of The Shield standing near the color orange, Rob has to explain in the text box that he is searching through the wreckage of his tenth(?) recent murder "for survivors." If you're wondering if it's normal for a comic to do this -describe all the action because it's faster than drawing it- no, it's not.

Another hallmark of Rob Liefeld's art is frantic nonsense instead of anatomy or design. It's why the plain concrete walls of The Shield's building have random cracks and bricks(?) every few feet, or why his indestructible costume suddenly has a bunch of super cool battle damage. Wait, oh yeah, fuck, indestructible costume. Well, no worries, they can add a text box explaining it has, I don't know, "limits" and "self-repairing nanites" now. What I'm getting at is that Rob Liefeld will rewrite an entire character and his origin story if it gets him out of forty seconds of work.

The comic ends with all the superheroes voting to kill The Shield including this lady version of a Captain America guy. Like many Rob Liefeld drawings, it's hard to tell if Dusty Simmons, "former boy detective current Crusaders liaison," is three feet tall or if Rob's brain made some kind of mistake during its understanding of perspective. It probably doesn't help that they are standing on nothing in a dimension made only of primordial America.

There's one more thing to talk about. Obviously, I'd never claim a comic was Maximum Liefeldian without another important aspect of Rob Liefeld's work: petty, stupid behind-the-scenes drama that leads to him leaving the project.

Apparently, Rob was furious when an alternate cover by Tone Rodriguez was "leaked." It revealed the surprise that would have shocked The Shield's longtime fans*! A version of The Shield from the future, a big gun-carrying one, was going to come back to the current The Shield's time! That's right, the guy known for creating Cable and also the same things over and over, created Cable again!

* ha ha

What's great is that an image of Old Gun The Shield was already being circulated in promotions for the comic for months. And the first page of this issue I'm talking about, the very first page, has a picture of him, battle-damaged indestructible suit and all:

It's not a sudden twist at the end! Even assuming you had any expectations for whatever the fuck a The Shield story might be, knowing an old time-traveling version of him was going to show up only spoils the brief moment between picking up the comic and opening it. And Rob Liefeld quit over it! That's like walking off the set of Transmorphers 2 because the first one's DVD box told everyone it was 86 minutes long. There is nothing more Rob Liefeld than abandoning a knockoff Captain America comic after drawing eight lazy splash pages, one foot, and even fewer backgrounds. Even trying to imagine something more Liefeldian would risk shattering our reality and L-Liefeld Liefeld Rob Liefeld Liefeld. Liefeld. Rob Liefeld.

...

This article is brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme, TheLaziestManOnMars: Who comes complete with katana, shoulderpads, beltpouches, and couch rectangle. Feet not included.

Comments

I am commenting today, February 17, 2024 because Rob Liefeld is being a shithead on Facebook and it made me so irrationally angry that I had to travel back in time just to read Seanbaby dunking on Liefeld.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

Also, I can't stop grinning at the "Fighting American". I saw that picture a couple times on the internet, but always assumed it was just from some Captain America comic and immediately stopped thinking about it. For some reason the idea that this Superamerican Captain is just a knock-off so blatant it fooled me into believing it's the real one really amuses me.

Libluini

So, for Liefeld, a future version of your hero is just your hero + beard + a gun? Checks out.

Libluini

I know I'm 8 months late but did no one notice how when the assassin burst into Shield's apartment that he came from the wrong direction in every subsequent panel? Bad guy is to Shield's left. Then to his right. Then his left. This is harder to get wrong than right!

Heisanevilgenius

Drawing human bodies all wrong (not just women but all of them) is only a "style" if it's a choice and not just that you have no idea how to draw human anatomy correctly. Picasso mastered classical painting of the human form before he developed a style that made them purposefully abstract. There's intent and meaning there. There's no artistic intent or meaning behind the twisted spines and gigantic rib cages in a Liefeld work any more than there is behind his efforts to avoid drawing feet. It's a limitation, not a style.

Christopher Burke

I've seen webcomic artists go from definitely-worse-than-Liefeld to clearly-better-than-Liefeld over shorter runs.

Christopher Burke

I’m more concerned with the fact that they’re both standing at a slight angle.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

It's amazing how someone can draw for a living for decades and not improve at all.

Drunkenstein

Lee trying to make Liefeld finish the left leg and him completely ignoring it was hilarious. Favorite quote from Liefeld: "Rivets look next door to me."

Drunkenstein

Not "talentless", but he reached the limits of his talent and has never progressed beyond that. All of his characters look the same. The same facial structure, the same grimace, the same hair, the same physique. As others have pointed out, the only thing that differentiates this comic from his work in the 90s is the lack of pouches. Say what you will about Kirby and other artists drawing "unrealistic" or ridiculous designs, but I feel like their basic understanding of form and perspective are sound, and they made conscious choices to create things that were fantastical but based on solid foundations, whereas Liefeld just has a bad sense of things like form and perspective, and as a result, his drawings are unintentionally wonky.

Matt Pedone

You know…that’s a very interesting take on Liefeld’s body of work. I’ve never thought about it like that. I’m gonna have to do some thinking about that.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

Controversial opinion time: I don't actually think Liefeld is talentless. His drawing style is...distinctive, and it certainly isn't bland. I think there is a lot of potential there, it is just that it somehow got trapped in a direction where it is a parody of itself. A lot of the reason that people (including me) don't like it is because there is weird social subtext behind it, like every man is carrying 5 guns and every woman has improbable anatomy, so it gets a weird vibe beyond it just being unrealistic. Galactus' hat makes no sense, either but comic book nerds don't dislike Jack Kirby, because there wasn't a disturbing subtext to his stylistic quirks.

Matthew Harris

Liefeld confuses me because he seems to be in on the joke that is his own career but then also he does drek like this on purpose. So if you wanted to be VERY GENEROUS you could argue that he's just trapped in a Hell of his own design, but the much more plausible scenario is that he's just a talentless hack idiot who lucked into a career at the exact right moment in time.

petertron

Captain America shield rules are in effect.

Brendan McGinley

They don't need to carry ammo like we did in the '90s now that they have it all on their phones--wait.

Brendan McGinley

That's a good point, and David is a friend, so I will ply him with beer to get the real/horror story if he took over as early as this issue.

Brendan McGinley

God help me, I remember first encountering Winsor McCay as a pre-teen and thinking it had nothing on Liefeld. Looking back that was mostly print quality, but thank the stars for personal growth.

Brendan McGinley

To be semi-serious, if he left before the issue was scripted, I assume that the new writer(apparently David Gallaher, because for some reason I cared enough to look it up) didn't have much to work with. I'd guess he had to pretty much write a story from scratch on a very tight deadline(53 days between Liefeld quitting to the comic being released), based solely on incomplete artwork... which might also explain the reused art being shown inside the TV and the pin-up being converted into two pages of the story. In theory, creating a story based off artwork could and should still be well written, but that's assuming the art is at least somewhat comprehensible and easy to follow. And we're talking Liefeld here, who apparently was planning to have an introspective story of Shield sitting on Darkseid's old toilet and staring at pinups of himself on Future-TV™, while contemplating the fact that he forgot to take his uniform off before he defecated.

The Parallel Viewmaster

In guided meditation they sometimes say to clench your fists on the inhale and release on the exhale to let go of stress. I can't prove they weren't ghost-written by Mr Liefield though.

LyraV

He's wearing "indistructible armor" but they never think to shoot him in the face?

Bill D

Every day is Pec Day for the Fighting American.

Dean Costello

Men and women--my wife, a comic fan since the early 80s, noted: What the hell is wrong with their groins? The men look like they are smuggling kielbasas and the women--what in the Sam Hill is going on there!?!???!

Dean Costello

My thinking. Maybe Dusty and Not Wonder Woman are demons, and the hooves are the giveaway?

Dean Costello

With six and a half thousand teeth.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

This was the right article for me today. I mean, there are days when getting deep into the Satanic Panic is interesting, but today I wanted to go for something more relatable. Seanbaby dissecting Liefeld is like watching the Globetrotters take apart the Generals. The end result is inevitable, but its entertaining getting there.

Matthew Harris

I guess we are now decades deep into the Liefeld criticism meta, and when I finished this article, I was like "Seanbaby forgot to mention the pouches!" and then I went back and saw there was only one guy wearing pouches.

Matthew Harris

Is Liefield capable of drawing a grin? Literally every picture where a character shows teeth they have the same sneer.

FancyShark

It’s magical

FancyShark

Wow. None of these characters are covered in superfluous, inexplicable pouches. Progress?

Joshua Graves

It's called Podophobia, Rob. May your journey to healing commence, in your case, not by foot.

Kevin Hanlon

Thanks! I was angling for a promotion, and your fashion advice gave me an idea for casual Friday!

The Parallel Viewmaster

I mean, it looks like he draws with a clenched fist.

Kevin Hanlon

When you are Rob Liefield, this IS your default posture.

Kevin Hanlon

Sweet Jesus—Seanbaby dunking on Rob Liefeld is pure fucking perfection.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

we can only hope that Sir Donner is up there, asking a selesltial make-up artist which side the camera things film from, in Heaven meanwhile whoever "brilliant suit" thought ol Dick Lester would do a better job is smokin a turd in hell

sissyneck

I love how the line "he was so good at drawing Captain America..." is directly above the insanely obese yet oddly ripped Fighting American, a figure that proves the man who drew it was not good at anything. Did Liefeld get confused and try to give FA giant breasts, and then not know where to stop? Did the shield throw him off so badly he couldn't figure out how to *not* draw a body around it? Does he realize that a man this thicc wouldn't be able to punch an enemy standing right in front of him? Or see anyone crouching less than three feet away? How would his skeletal structure even work? I have so many questions and the only answer to any of them is the extremely unsatisfactory phrase, "Rob Liefeld".

Bonnybedlam

Are we really not going to talk about the groins? Because it looks like everyone's idea of a cup is 'stuff a salad bowl down my pants so that sits somewhere between my belly button and pubic bone.' And we'll signal hierarchy by the size of the salad bowl.

Chris W.

It is impossible to believe this is a recent comic.

Fatamatician

Is Dusty a genetically modified cow? I swear Leifeld drew hooves at the end of his legs.

Bill Culbertson

As a hobbyist artist, I can't say I draw better than Liefeld, but I certainly don't draw worse. My drawings of humans have human proportions, though not always executed well. I will say, that for all the shit we give Liefeld about feet, his hands are also lazily done. I noticed his heroes stand around with closed fists 99% of the time. How often do you just stand/sit around idly with your fist clenched shut?

Vooster

Man, I just watched that video, Stan is absolutely savage in it.

Max Rockatansky

Barring the character intros, you can swap almost any narrative box in this story to any other panel and nothing changes.

Brendan McGinley

I owned this and Todd drags Rob throughout. That's one mean Canadian.

Brendan McGinley

I loved the zoom in on Dusty Simmons, "former boy detective current Crusaders liaison," feet with no additional comments.

Jeff Orasky

i like a Rob Liefeld comic from time to time, like a takeaway. cant have one every day cos your colon will explode, but a nice cheeky treat every so often

SoylentRobot

As a kid in the 90s Liefeld was a huge influence on me. It took me over a decade to unlearn some bad habits. But, eventually, with great patience and effort, I overcame my bout of Liefeld Disease and could draw feet, anatomy, men without a million pouches and women without comically large and gravity-defying breasts.

Will Black

The fact they let Rob keep going is what baffles me. There is a clip online of Stan Lee basically mocking Rob and McFarlane while they "draw" an "original" character called Overkill. It's one of my favorite things ever.

Talking Alpaca


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