
Will Eisner (editor, script, pencils, inks)
Joe Kubert (colors)
Sam Rosen (letters)
Orphans is about the Spirit taking a young orphan, Billy, slumming in the underworld. Spirit comes across Billy and his friend, Barney, in the cemetery smoking cigars and getting sick from it. Barney’s trying to convince Billy to join a gang with him. Spirit interrupts; Billy thinks Spirit’s swell, Barney thinks “crimefighters” stink.
After Barney heads off to join the gang, Spirit takes Billy back to the crypt lair to get some information on Barney’s future mob boss. Once they’ve got that information, they head out, with the Spirit busting heads until they get to the big boss.
The “boss fight,” which barely involves the boss, has Spirit fighting a dozen opponents. It’s a beautifully choreographed punch-out, starting with Spirit escaping his restraints and knocking heads. The Spirit moves between panels gracefully, almost patiently, working his way through one thug or four. It’s a beautiful sequence. And then it keeps going. And keeps going again. It’s an incredibly long, absolutely fantastic action scene. Eisner keeps coming up with something new; even some of the familiar poses, with Spirit’s sockless ankles visible, are fresh; Eisner’s figured out how to string the visuals together, finding the rhythm of the scene, and it’s sublime. Orphans has some of the best art in the strip so far, even if the splash page is an almost hokey picture of the Spirit, looking like the cover of a country western album. It’s a combination of the concept, the pose, and some very stiff lines.
Then, the art of the boys is very expressive and fun. Eisner and studio exaggerate their expressions, particularly when sick from cigar smoke, giving the strip some extra pizzazz.
Until the mega fight starts, Orphans is just Spirit lecturing Billy about how crime doesn’t pay. He shows him some examples, but they’re exaggerated ones involving comic strip gangsters. Billy’s eventual reckoning doesn’t even involve any “organized” crime. It’ll be an emotional reaction, which is weird. But it’s also a very thin message—kids always need to remember to tell other kids: crime doesn’t pay.
It’s a gorgeous strip, with some solid writing on the kids (Barney’s a fun little shit), and the didactic stuff can’t overwhelm the strong comics.


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