The Disney Afternoon: #3, Part 2
Is it really that time again? It’s Wednesday, I feel a little anxious, and I don’t have any plans except to stare into the abyss of my black soul and ponder the true worth of the human race. Yep, it’s time for another installment of the Disney Afternoon Marvel comics!

Something tells me I should have done some serious couch potatoing
myself with those Darkwing Duck DVDs.
We join our hero in his civilian form as he prepares for a night of extreme laziness. Drake gets a little antsy, as the remote isn’t working, and he’s stuck on the Home Swapping Channel. (I’m too lazy to include the image, but the schmuck on the screen is advertising a “Portable Patented Pulsating Potato Peeler for $1.25, plus $59.95 for shipping and tax.” Can the channel really be called the Home Swapping Channel if money is involved?)
He’s got only two more minutes before he misses the World Wrestling Fight Fest with Frank the Fearsome Facing Off Against the Menacing Mauler from Milwaukee. Yes, that’s the whole title of the program. What surprises me is that they didn’t choose a more animal-theme name like Mule-waukee. Isn’t that what most of these Disney cartoons do?
Nothing. So Drake goes for a more scientific approach: “Lessee… the hypotenuse of the tangent minus the cosine and shift my weight on a right axis–” You know, I got straight C’s in most of my math classes (except for those two miraculous moments when I actually got A’s), but I suspect that that formula is bunk.
Being mathematical hasn’t helped, so Drake goes on to “Plan B.”

Hellacious Demon Child Tantrum Mode! You know you’ve gone off the deep end when Gosalyn is the voice of reason. She suggests that Drake use the buttons on the TV set… which was what her dad knew all along. (By the way, Honker is also not colored in the next panel. Did the colorist just not care?)
But what d’ya know, Drake is too stupid and desperate to use the buttons on the TV set. He scrambles for all the batteries in the house. Not a single one is working in the remote. A nightmare lazy people the world over know all too well, I’m afraid. (Whatever did happen to plug-in remotes, anyway? Or was that just the ancient VCR my parents had back in the 80s?)

In the days before e-mail, we had to throw bricks through each other’s windows…
and we liked it that way!
Emergency message from SHUSH! Apparently, they’ve forgotten how to use phones. Darkwing Duck is needed immediately. “I wonder what dastardly deeds are dashing the city into the depths of despair that need the services of Darkwing Duck,” Drake muses as he sits in a chair. “Whatever, it’s time for Drake Mallard to become Darkkkwwwing Duck!” (Try to emphasize the triple K’s. Sounds like a hiss, doesn’t it? That’s why duplicating consonants is a bad idea, unless you speak a Scandinavian language.) With the chair rapidly spinning, Drake is transported to his secret headquarters.

Believe it or not, that’s a chair spinning around.
At the super secret headquarters, Darkwing checks in with J. Gander Hooter. Batteries are failing all over St. Canard! “Cars won’t start, flashlights and emergency back-up equipment are powerless!” Hooter cries. “Even the remote control for my T.V. is out! I can’t change channels, it’s most distressing!”
DW is on top of the job! Then he asks Hooter if he’s tried the buttons the TV set. Such an idea had never occurred to the SHUSH head honcho, and he’s relieved for DW’s wisdom. Are the adults in this world just lazy and stupid, or what?
Never mind that. We’ve got a crime scene to get to! Except that neither the Thunderquack or Ratcatcher seem to be working. Launchpad had tuned it up earlier… and threw out some “leftover parts.” I’m not mechanically savvy, but even I know that every nut and bolt in a car has its use. I also know better than to fiddle around with the parts that could possibly render my car a very expensive and ugly lawn ornament. But Launchpad–the pilot and mechanic for DW–doesn’t know this. Fortunately, the Ratcatcher hadn’t been “tuned up,” but with the battery issue at hand, it’s not going anywhere. Which leaves our heroes with…

… a nine-year-old girl’s bike. Yes, Gos was kind enough to donate something to the cause. It’s even got streamers flowing from the handlebars! Using his patented Triangulating Electromagnetic Power Pointer and Handy-Dandy Nail Clipper, Darkwing picks up a massive power source on the road. What could it be? Batteries, failing devices, city-wide chaos? Which villain is best known for his electricty fetish? (I’m pretty sure there’s a word for it. There’s a word for nearly every fetish, you know.)

Yes, it’s Megavolt, and he’s got a serious case of road rage. He drives his boxy car over DW and Launchpad. How those tires aren’t banged up after crunching that bike, I’ll never know. But what fun! I wish my little Honda were capable of such destruction.
DW immediately uses his powers of deduction, or pondering, to figure out why Megavolt is draining the power from batteries. My guess is that he has something evil planned for St. Canard, but that’s pretty vague, even if it’s the basis for most DW universe villains’ plans.
Launchpad asks if maybe they should call Gos about her mutilated bike. “At least send her a fax,” he says. He pulls a shovel out of hammerspace and says that they could always tunnel back into the house past Gosalyn. To which DW replies, “Soon as this case is over, I’m calling the Sidekick Union to see if anyone has returned your brain!”
All right, honesty time: I’m sick of this story. It’s stupid, dumb, and the inking makes me want to hurt cute, fluffy things. So let’s speed through this, shall we? I’ve got to get back to the kludge site, anyway.
In less than one panel, DW has figured it all out: Megavolt wants to drain all the batteries and main power plant in the city so that no one will stand in his way. Seriously, that’s what he says. LP decides to take this time to mention some other modifications he made, but DW won’t hear it. He’s got some planning to do.
While Megavolt chortles and gloats about his plan coming to fruition, DW makes his grand appearance. “I am the terror” and all that… and then he notices that something is amiss. Namely, his scent. Yes, that’s the other modification LP made: a floral bouquet scent to go along with the purple smoke that helps our hero look so damn awesome. Honestly, LP, what the fuck were you smoking?
Megavolt does exactly what I want to do to this story and zaps DW and LP with a blast gun. It just knocks them back a few feet so Megs can run over to his Triple Tank Titanic Turbo Tansformer (exact name) and attempt to finish the energy transfer. DW wails about how they need to stop him or “St. Canard is doomed to darkness!”
To which LP replies, “Uh–couldn’t we just ask him to quit? Doesn’t he know electricity can be dangerous?”
LP, Megavolt probably snacks on batteries like we snack on popcorn. He probably has a blow-up doll hooked up to an outlet. The guy lives to have his nerve endings fried and re-fried every day. While he’s aware of the dangers, he doesn’t give a shit.
DW tries to get close but nearly gets zapped again. Curses! It’s time to use his own handheld weapon and bubble the shit out of that evil-doer–
Yes, LP messed up again.

Just kill him, DW. Kill him.
And just like that, DW tells Megs that they’re leaving. Naturally, this pleases the Villain of the Week, and DW keeps his word. Personally, this feels too out of character for DW, but this is the Marvel DA comic we’re talking about.

Gotta love that exposition/fast-forward technique. What does DW create out of all that rushing around? Why, a giant plug. Did they just have that lying around in a construction site? Did the crew lock up any of their materials? Why do I even care?
All that’s left is to fly into action and defeat that megalomaniacal mole. (Megavolt is a mole, right?) DW’s going to “use my suction cup to anchor myself to that girder so I can get above Megavolt and lower this power-draining plug onto the prongs of Megavolt’s helmet… thus grounding him and shorting out his plans.” Why mention his name twice in the same sentence? C’mon, grammar, people!
Of course, it’s not meant to be…

DW, you should seriously consider just setting aside all your paternal fears and let Gos follow in your crimefighting footsteps. Hell, Honker’s a smart kid. What hero couldn’t use a genius kid?
DW hurtles through the air, straight for “eight quazillion volts of electricity” flowing through a transformer. Below, Megavolt is screaming in pure orgasmic ecstacy with all the power going through him. If the the Funk Island episode of The Great Eastern has taught me anything, is that lots of energy can certainly produce some rather interesting physiological reactions. So… the less you think about Megavolt getting an electrical stiffy, the better.
So what happens when DW finally comes crashing down to earth?

Success, natch. What, do you think they’d actually write a story where he fails utterly and miserably? No, we’ve got fanfic writers for that, but they’re all too busy writing emo Mary Sue alternate universe stories. With some slash thrown in.
Finished! Gah! It only took me a few months to finish this issue, but that’s because it took for-freaking-ever for my laptop screen to get repaired. But, woof, what a dog of a story. The first story in this issue was definitely the stronger of the two. Drake/Darkwing in this one seemed a little too scatterbrained, childish, and cowardly. But maybe I just need to sit my butt down and do some character study with the first season.















































